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The UN: A stabilizing
force in the world economy
As national economies become more
and more interdependent through information, trade, investment
and financial ties, the UN is helping to fill a growing
need for international cooperation and regulatory consistency
to spread the benefits of globalization and to avoid chaos
and backlash.
- The UN provides the "soft infrastructure"
for the global economy. It sets technical standards
and norms in such diverse areas as statistics, trade
laws, customs procedures, intellectual property, aviation,
shipping and telecommunications, thus facilitating
economic activity and reducing transaction costs.
- The UN prepares the ground for investment
in emerging economies, by promoting political stability
and good governance, battling corruption and human
rights abuses, urging sound economic policies and
business-friendly legislation, and working to improve
health, education and social well-being.
- The UN addresses the down side of
globalization, by fighting transnational crime, the
traffic in drugs, arms and people, and other "problems
without passports". Much of its operational work in
over 170 countries is aimed at combating poverty.
These efforts reduce tensions, prevent backlash and
help build future markets.
- The UN is working to solve global
environmental problems. Free markets don't automatically
do this. As an international forum for building consensus
and negotiating agreements, the UN is tackling transboundary
problems like climate change, ozone depletion, toxic
waste, loss of forests and species, and air and water
pollution. Unless these problems are addressed, markets
and economies will not be sustainable in the long
term - for they are depleting the natural "capital"
on which growth, and human survival, are based.
- UN values are the cornerstone of
an interdependent world. Globalizing markets rely
on contractual and trust-based relationships built
on shared values.
Since its inception, the UN's primary mission has
been to advocate universal values: freedom, justice
and the peaceful resolution of disputes; social progress
and better standards of living; equality, tolerance
and dignity. The global acceptance and spread of these
values is forging a common understanding that is paving
the way for markets to expand and take root.
The Global Compact. In 1999, Kofi Annan brought the whole
relationship one step higher with the Global Compact announced
at Davos. He challenged the business community -- individually
through companies, and collectively through business associations
-- to embrace, support and enact a set of core values
in the areas of human rights, labour standards, and environmental
practices.
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Prepared for posting by the UN Website Section- Department of Public Information ©
United Nations 2003
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