Antigua.news Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne Demands Global Financial Reform to Support Small Island States at FfD4 in Seville

Prime Minister Gaston Browne Demands Global Financial Reform to Support Small Island States at FfD4 in Seville

1 July 2025 - 18:33

Prime Minister Gaston Browne Demands Global Financial Reform to Support Small Island States at FfD4 in Seville

1 July 2025 - 18:33

Prime Minister Gaston Browne Demands Global Financial Reform to Support Small Island States at FfD4 in Seville

Seville, Spain – 30 June 2025 – Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister, the Honourable Gaston Browne, delivered a compelling and urgent address at the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development (FfD4), forcefully advocating for systemic change in the global financial architecture to ensure justice and survival for Small Island Developing States (SIDS).

Speaking at the General Debate, Prime Minister Browne underscored the persistent economic and social vulnerabilities of SIDS and the global community’s failure to deliver meaningful reform over the past three decades.

“Without fundamental reform of the global financial architecture, SIDS will remain trapped in a vicious cycle of costly borrowings, escalating debt, and rising vulnerability,” he asserted.

The Prime Minister expressed disappointment in the tepid outcomes of the Conference, criticizing the soft language and lack of ambition in its declaration. He warned that repetitive appeals without action reflect “global inertia, benign neglect, and perhaps most likely, disrespect.”

Prime Minister Browne also highlighted the bold initiatives developed by SIDS themselves, particularly through the Antigua and Barbuda Agenda for SIDS (ABAS), which was adopted at the SIDS4 Conference in 2024. He emphasized the establishment of the Debt Sustainability Support Service (DSSS)—a SIDS-led mechanism designed to Create fiscal space, Reduce financial risk, and Unlock critical investment.

He described the DSSS as a practical tool grounded in the lived realities of island states, and not a substitute for international institutions but a necessary enhancement to ensure inclusive development.

“Lip service cannot build resilience. Platitudes cannot fund preparedness,” Prime Minister Browne said. “We now urge this Conference to explicitly support the operationalization of the DSSS.”

In a stark critique of the existing financial order, the Prime Minister highlighted how SIDS are routinely penalized for their climate vulnerability and investment in resilience, which perversely leads to lower credit ratings.

He cited a DSSS-commissioned study showing that properly valuing resilience could increase SIDS’ credit ratings by 35% and reverse economic contraction. He also noted that SIDS have paid over $10 billion more than the original value of their debt due to currency depreciation—more than the combined annual education and health budgets of all SIDS.

“We borrowed for socio-economic development and to repair damaged infrastructure, incurring penalties we never agreed to,” he stated. “This is one of the great economic failures of our time.”

Prime Minister Browne also issued a clear and actionable call to the global community:

Establish and support the DSSS with transparent governance.
Engage the private sector, development banks, and philanthropic partners in supporting SIDS through capital and innovation.
Institutionalize the SIDS Centre of Excellence, as recommended in the FfD4 outcome.
Adopt the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index (MVI) across all major platforms including the UN, Bretton Woods institutions, OECD, and the Paris Club.
Rejecting any notion of charity, Prime Minister Browne closed with a strong message of solidarity and shared responsibility:

“We seek not sympathy but solidarity; not pity but partnership; not charity but change.”

He concluded with a challenge to all development partners to “walk with us, stand with us, reform with us,” warning that failure to act would not only betray SIDS but humanity at large.

About The Author
<a href="https://antigua.news/author/editorial-satff/" target="_self">Editorial Staff</a>

Editorial Staff

The Editorial Staff refers to all reporters employed by Antigua.news. When an article is not an original creation of Antigua.news—such as when it is based on a press release, other media articles, letters to the editor, or court decisions—one of our staff members is responsible for overseeing its publication. Contact: [email protected]

5 Comments

  1. Right now I feel l like is beg we begging. I mean how many ways can we ask for what we rightfully deserve

    Reply
    • Lol hahahaha. What else do you expect we do. When you go to the bank for a loan, you are begging. He has no choice.

      Reply
  2. PM Browne is right, SIDS deserve more than platitudes. Time for the global system to stop punishing us for being vulnerable.

    Reply
  3. Why are we still borrowing under systems that penalize us for resilience? It’s like being punished for trying to survive.

    Reply
  4. We’re not asking for charity, we’re demanding the fairness we’ve been denied for decades. SIDS have paid too high a price just to stay afloat while the world looks the other way.

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About The Author
<a href="https://antigua.news/author/editorial-satff/" target="_self">Editorial Staff</a>

Editorial Staff

The Editorial Staff refers to all reporters employed by Antigua.news. When an article is not an original creation of Antigua.news—such as when it is based on a press release, other media articles, letters to the editor, or court decisions—one of our staff members is responsible for overseeing its publication. Contact: [email protected]

5 Comments

  1. Right now I feel l like is beg we begging. I mean how many ways can we ask for what we rightfully deserve

    Reply
    • Lol hahahaha. What else do you expect we do. When you go to the bank for a loan, you are begging. He has no choice.

      Reply
  2. PM Browne is right, SIDS deserve more than platitudes. Time for the global system to stop punishing us for being vulnerable.

    Reply
  3. Why are we still borrowing under systems that penalize us for resilience? It’s like being punished for trying to survive.

    Reply
  4. We’re not asking for charity, we’re demanding the fairness we’ve been denied for decades. SIDS have paid too high a price just to stay afloat while the world looks the other way.

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

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