SPECPOL Background Guide
SPECPOL Background Guide
SPECPOL Background Guide
Contents
Committee Description…………..…………………………………………………………………..……………..8
International Perspective………………………………………………………..……………………………….25
Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….35
3
We are honoured and delighted to invite you to the tenth edition of St. Stephen’s Model
United Nations hosted by one of the most prestigious educational institutions of the
country and a collegiate society, The Planning Forum, started by Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru
himself. With a legacy of establishment going back to 1881, our college fosters the
essence of a transforming nation itself in its charming historical campus, and it is this
heritage which we wish to extend through the interactions at SMUN ‘18.
We, at SMUN, have come to recognize that in an exponentially expanding MUN culture in
the country, the academic pursuit and quest for debating the merits of ideas has been
waylaid somehow beneath the veneer of numbers. In our opinion, students have the
most to achieve and learn within the ambit of a college-level MUN when it is organized
without the dilutions in the academic impetus as seen in current conferences. Therefore,
it is our humble endeavour to bring quality dialogue back to the entire concept of
articulating diplomacy and informed decision making.
We shall gladly undertake this responsibility, with your participation, in making our five
passionately conceptualized committees a success, and helping us in providing a debate
which truly challenges the status quo as encompassed in areas as diverse as law,
disarmament or human rights, and a timeline of events—past and future.
My organizing committee and I look forward to hosting you in the February of 2018, at
the largest SMUN conference yet, which we hope will go a long way in providing you with
an opportunity to not only debate and learn, but also network, engage with our college’s
student body, and share in our vision for a competitive yet intellectually rewarding
conference. On behalf of the organizing committee of SMUN ’18 and The Planning Forum
of St. Stephen’s College, I invite you to an experience of three days, five committees, a
handpicked executive board, and a peek into what we fondly call the Stephania.
Regards,
Sanaa Alvira
Director of Simulations
The Planning Forum
St. Stephen’s College
4
Dear Delegates,
It gives me great pleasure to welcome you to the academic simulation of the UNGA-IV
Committee at St. Stephen’s College Model United Nations Conference 2018. We hope
this experience enriches your public speaking skills and that you learn about a
pressing world issue that complicates the lives of many people in our country as well
as abroad.
Before the conference, it is very important to break the larger agenda into smaller
subtopics and ask yourself questions about the agenda. Making chits and moderated
caucus topics beforehand would give you an edge in moderately larger committees
like the UNGA. It is also crucial to enhance your leadership skills and lobbying capacity
since we will be giving equal importance to overall participation in committee. We
would be using the UNA-USA rules of procedure to facilitate this simulation. You may
consult http://www.unausa.org/global-classrooms-model-un/how-to-
participate/model-un-preparation/rules-of-procedure to clear queries, if any,
regarding the same.
Our agenda is ‘Prevention of Territorial Dispute and State Failure in Small Island
Developing States’. This background guide must not be taken to be exhaustive in
scope. This guide aims at providing you with the foundational knowledge and give
concrete real world examples. Not all aspects of each case are discussed in detail
since our objective is to explain the territorial dispute and state failure as opposed to
finding a solution for each case. However, I have tried to provide extra links for
research under each category to provide a nuanced context. I would take this
opportunity to elaborate upon the criteria for judgment which we will follow in the
committee. We hardly see Executive Board Members spell out the criteria for
judgment in the committee for various reasons. However, since we wish to ensure a
fair simulation, we will elaborate upon the criteria we wish to follow and institute in
the committee to give an equal footing to every delegate participating, as follows:
1. Research [3]
2. Analysis [3]
3. Guidance of Debate (Participation in Moderated Caucus and Unmoderated
Caucus/Lobbying) [2]
4. Policy Considerations (Furtherance/Defence) [2]
5
Chits will be given the same recognition as verbal statements in the committee;
however, they will not be given equal marking. While verbal statements (and
demeanour) will be marked out of 10 (as mentioned above), the written statements
will be marked out of 8 (Category 1, 2, and 4)
This does not mean it is okay to bring a notebook full of chits and submit it all to the
executive board! The point behind allowing equal recognition to chits is to promote
the concept of being fair to each delegate. Equal recognition in this context, implies
that the content of the chit needs to be about what is being discussed in the
committee during formal and informal debate (Moderated Caucus only).
Chits which contain information regarding a topic which isn’t the subject of discussion
during GSLs or Moderated Caucuses will not be marked upon.
I shall, to the best of my abilities, ensure that a fair simulation is conducted and there
is ample scope for fruitful and meaningful discussion which paves the way for a
didactic learning experience.
Sincerely,
Varad Choudhary
varad95@gmail.com
6
2. Government Reports: These reports can be used in a similar way as the reports
of State Operated News Agencies and can, in all circumstances, be denied by another
country.
a. Government Websites like the State Department of the United States of
America (http://www.state.gov/index.htm) or the Ministry of Defence of the Russian
Federation (http://www.eng.mil.ru/en/index.htm)
b. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of various nations like India
(http://www.mea.gov.in/), People’s Republic of China
(http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/), France (http://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/en/),
Russian Federation (http://www.mid.ru/brp_4.nsf/main_eng)
c. Permanent Representatives to the United Nations Reports
(http://www.un.org/en/members/; Click on any country to get the website of the
Office of its Permanent Representative)
d. Multilateral Organizations like the NATO
(http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/index.htm), ASEAN
(http://www.aseansec.org/), OPEC (http://www.opec.org/opec_web/en/), etc.
7
The United Nations Fourth Committee of the UN General Assembly (also known
as the Special Political and Decolonization Committee) is one of six committees
of the United Nations (which consists of all UN members). After the dismantling
of the trusteeship system resulting from independence being granted to all
the trust territories, and the limited number of non-self-governing territories
now, that jurisdiction is insufficient to keep the committee occupied.
Consequently, it was merged with the Special Political Committee (which had
been created as a seventh committee of the whole to deal with certain political
issues after the General Assembly found that the First Committee (Disarmament
and International Security) was too busy. The Fourth Committee deals with
decolonization, Palestinian refugees and human rights, peacekeeping, mine
action, outer space, public information, atomic radiation and the University for
Peace.
With extensive political reshaping of the world, more than 80 former colonies,
comprising about 750 million people, have gained independence since the
creation of the United Nations. At present, 17 Non-Self-Governing
Territories (NSGTs), home to nearly 2 million people, across the globe remain to
be decolonized. Thus, the process of decolonization is not complete. Completing
the job will require a continuing dialogue among the administering Powers,
the Special Committee on Decolonization, and the people of these territories, in
accordance with the relevant UN resolutions on decolonization.
In 1990, the General Assembly proclaimed the first International Decade for the
Eradication of Colonialism, including a specific plan of action. December 2010
marked the fiftieth anniversary of the Declaration, coinciding with the end of
the Second International Decade and the proclamation of a Third one.
The Committee of 24 (Special Committee on Decolonization) and its Bureau are
assisted by the Decolonization Unit of the Department of Political Affairs for
substantive support and by the Department for General Assembly and
1
http://www.un.org/en/ga/fourth/
9
2 http://www.un.org/en/decolonization/
10
Population
The average proportion of the population aged less than 15 years (27.43%) is
slightly above the global figure (26.11%) but varies widely among SIDS, with
Comoros, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Principe, and Timor-Leste above 40%.
The proportion of the population aged more than 65 years is lower than the
current global average of 8.3%, which could be expected for a group containing
many developing countries, which generally have younger populations. Average
annual population growth is lower in SIDS than globally, but varies within the
SIDS sub-classifications. Population growth is substantially higher in the AIMS
group as compared to the Caribbean and Pacific states, with the US Virgin Islands
and Puerto Rico experiencing consistent negative growth between 2000 and
2015. Furthermore, average population growth between 2010 and 2015 was
negative in American Samoa, Bermuda, and Niue. The current trends of low and
negative population growth in many SIDS will accelerate population ageing
within the next few decades.
Economics
The average Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita in 2015 in SIDS is US
$12,612, increasing to US $15,444 when least developed countries are excluded.
An outlier in this category is Singapore, with its GDP per capita being over US
$30,000, much higher than the next highest state, the Bahamas, at US $22 817,
reflecting Singapore’s development into an international centre of commerce
and finance. Of the 30 countries globally which have a GDP per capita of under
US $1,000, 3 of these are SIDS (Guinea-Bissau, Comoros, and Haiti).
In some cases, favourable GDP per capita statistics mask on-going resource
depletion, particularly of fresh water sources, which are under increasing threat
due to urbanisation, changing land use, and tourism. Many SIDS are reliant on
industries such as tourism, agriculture, fishing, and mining for income, and are
therefore vulnerable to fluctuations in market prices and tourist numbers. Due
to the smaller and shallower land mass present on small islands, resource
12
depletion through mining can occur. The economy of the island of Nauru was
previously almost entirely reliant on phosphate mining, however resources have
been virtually exhausted, with over 80% of the island’s surface strip-mined and
now infertile.
The total expenditure on health as a percentage of GDP varies widely, with SIDS
countries, territories and areas representing the lowest expenditure globally
(Timor-Leste, 1.48%) and the second highest expenditure, fractionally lower
than the United States (Marshall Islands, 17.14%). The mean expenditure of
6.94%, is lower than the global average (9.94%) and between the figures for
middle income countries and high-income countries (5.82% and 12.27%
respectively)
Of the 35 SIDS for which there is 2015 Human Development Index data, the
majority are categorised as having high human development, with the block
having an overall average of 0.6866.
In terms of literacy, the average adult literacy rate for males (90.85%) and
females (88.31%) is above global average, particularly for females. There exists
is a double figure discrepancy between the genders in favour of males in two
countries: Guinea-Bissau (23.5%, data from 1999) and the Solomon Islands
(14.7%, data from 1999). Of the 32 countries where data was available, there
was a higher rate of adult female literacy in 13 countries, with Jamaica
representing the country with the greatest difference of 9.13%.3 4
3 http://unohrlls.org/custom-content/uploads/2013/09/Small-Island-Developing-States-Factsheet-
2013-.pdf
4 http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2013/09/Jahan.htm
13
5http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2014EF000278/pdf
http://unohrlls.org/custom-content/uploads/2013/08/SIDS-Small-Islands-Bigger-Stakes.pdf
http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/255804/1/WHO-CCU-17.08-eng.pdf
https://carleton.ca/cifp/wp-content/uploads/1020.pdf
https://www.cepal.org/publicaciones/xml/8/8118/G0588.html
14
SIDS rely heavily on trade to drive growth, resulting in the volatility of their
growth. Work carried out for the WIDER project, for instance, shows that in the
Caribbean the top five export commodities form between 70 percent and 96
percent of the regions' exports. This creates economic vulnerability to changes
in export demand and commodity prices. Trade flows, expressed as the sum of
commodity exports and imports relative to GDP, are far higher in SIDS than in all
other Developing countries (DCs) and the Least Developed Country (LDCs)
group. Commodity exports and imports as a percentage of GDP in any one year
were no less than 95 and as high as 141 percent, and averaged 110 percent over
the period 1980 to 2007. The equivalent numbers for all developing countries
were 64, 94 and 78 percent, respectively.
Natural hazards and external economic shocks can be prevented from resulting
in disasters by building and strengthening the resilience of households and
states in SIDS. Education, health and infrastructure contribute significantly to
household resilience. However, in providing these, many SIDS fall short, and
often require substantial foreign aid. Overall, SIDS receive the highest levels of
foreign aid of all developing countries relative to their GDP—over the period
1980 to 2006 amounting on average to 16 percent of GDPs, compared to only
one percent on average for all other developing countries.
There is however, considerable variation within the SIDS group in terms of aid,
remittance and FDI flows. SIDS in the Pacific receive very large amounts of aid
15
and remittances and low amounts of FDI relative to GDP. Aid and remittances to
these countries are indeed far higher, at the equivalent of 23 and 11 percent of
GDP, respectively. African SIDS receive higher levels of FDI relative to GDP, at 19
percent, higher than the other groups of SIDS. The Caribbean SIDS depend less
on aid, remittances and FDI, with these flows being no higher than the
equivalent of six percent of GDP.
Resilience is often constrained by the fact that the quality of governance varies
tremendously among SIDS and many are prone to state failure—SIDS are over-
represented in the fragile state category countries. This is made worse by
evidence that fragile and failing states are less able to absorb aid effectively.
Vulnerability of SIDS
The higher level of vulnerability of SIDS can be traced back to the interaction of
the following socio-economic and natural characteristics:
Sources: CDERA: Report on the Economic Impact of the Recent Disasters in the Eastern
Caribbean, 1998. ECLAC/CDCC: Selected Statistical Indicators of Caribbean Countries Doc.
LC/CAR/G.535 Vol. X 1997.
The small size of the population and economy of most Caribbean States means
that whenever a disaster strikes it affects a large proportion of the economy and
people, and development of the countries is set back by several years. For
example, the 210 miles per hour winds of Hurricane Luis which struck Antigua
and Barbuda in 1995 have been estimated to have caused over EC$ 810 million
in damages and had resulted in the closing of all hotels (Table 2). This amounted
to 71 percent of the island's GDP. This was particularly severe as 83 percent of
GDP is derived from tourism. Anguilla also suffered damages, which were
estimated to be 147 percent of its GDP. In addition to the loss of income and
employment that such disasters cause, scarce resources have to be diverted to
the repair of infrastructure, such as roads, power, and water supplies, away from
social essentials, such as health and education which are also frequently
damaged during these storms.
Sources: CDERA: Report on the Economic Impact of the Recent Disasters in the Eastern
Caribbean, 1998. ECLAC/CDCC: Selected Statistical Indicators of Caribbean Countries Doc.
LC/CAR/G.535 Vol. X 1997.
In addition to hurricanes, other natural hazards that are prevalent in the region
include volcanoes, earthquakes, mudslides and floods. Global environmental
developments pose additional challenges to the small, low-lying states of the
Caribbean. It has been suggested that as a consequence of global warming, sea
level may rise by one meter over the next 100 years (IPCC). This could lead to
significant losses of land area, in addition to likely damage to coral reefs
surrounding many of the islands (leading to reduced protection from the forces
of the sea, changes in aquatic ecosystems, including important fish resources
and biodiversity) as well as adverse changes to the fragile eco-systems of most
of the islands.
Also, in the case of the Caribbean, as is the case of other SIDS regions, the
number of straits used for international navigation and the heavy maritime
traffic that transits the Caribbean Sea, bearing in mind the presence of the
Panama Canal as a major transit hub, translate into very high levels of pollution
from oil tankers and the threat of such activity from an even more devastating
source, namely, the regular movement of nuclear and other hazardous materials
across the Caribbean Sea. The existence of these risks imposes great demands
on the planning capacity of the Small Island Developing States of the Caribbean
region, because of the need to incorporate adequate risk assessments,
prevention and mitigation measures into all aspects of sustainable development
planning. It also requires the capacity to develop or otherwise acquire, then to
apply, a valid and relevant methodology for the evaluation of the impact of the
disasters that regularly visit their territories. Finally, it requires the ability to
effectively mobilize wider international opinion in support of efforts to protect
the integrity of the Caribbean Sea which defines the region and its character,
and on which tourism, fishing, and other productive as well as recreational
pursuits are based.
19
The small size of these islands also dictates that land uses compete for a
resource which is inherently scarce. In most of the islands the rugged
topography also drastically reduces the amount of land available for
development to narrow coastal strips which must accommodate industry,
tourism, residential and other land uses.
Since the 1960s, with the advent of international travel to these islands, tourism
has exerted and continues to exert profound influence not only on employment
and foreign exchange earnings, but also on the land use and land ownership in
the islands. Much of the hotel plants, particularly the largest properties
occupying hundreds of acres located on prime coastal beaches, are owned by
international investors. Over time a sizeable amount of the already limited land
resource in these islands will be owned by foreigners. Adding to this is the fact
that over time, increasing numbers of tourists who have visited these islands
have returned and purchased land on which they have built luxurious
properties. The cumulative impact of these transactions is significant and
20
increasingly problematic in the long term, precisely because of the small size of
these islands.
When land leaves the local market it is traded on the foreign market usually in
United States currency at much higher prices than it was purchased for. The
resulting increase in land value exerts immediate impact on the price of land in
surrounding areas driving up prices beyond the reach of locals, and creating
artificial shortages of land for locals for housing and other essential services.
In the past, this trend towards increasing land ownership by non-nationals has
created serious social problems. In a number of islands, in cases where, for
example, popular tourist sites have been thus acquired, a number of popular
beaches were no longer as readily accessible to the local residents. Social
tensions as a result of this dynamic are evident.
integrated management programmes. Such programmes are for the most part
beyond the human resource, financial and institutional capacity of SIDS.
Physical distance to the major centres of trade and commerce, and isolation
make it difficult for Caribbean States to overcome the disadvantages of limited
size and small domestic markets by turning to world trade. While this is not a
big problem for the larger islands in the region, and given their proximity to the
United States and South American mainland, it still presents a challenge for the
smaller States like Dominica, Grenada, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
Distance and low volumes of imports and exports mean that transportation
costs tend to be high. For SIDS, it is not only the actual distance that poses a
problem, but also the fact that it is likely that there are only a few, monopolistic,
transportation providers. These costs reduce competitiveness and, therefore,
export revenues. Higher import prices mean reduction in consumer welfare.
In the social vulnerability profile of SIDS, as captured in the SIDS POA, reference
is made to, inter alia, the occurrence of population growth rates that exceed
economic growth rates and the implications this has on the provision of basic
welfare services, particularly for the women who are heads of households. In
addition, the small populations, which in absolute terms are quite small,
preclude the exploitation of economies of scale in many areas and, also, the
widespread use of highly skilled labour. The small sizes of national populations
also imply, as noted, costly public administration and infrastructure and limited
institutional capacities. Moreover, the generally high levels of emigration,
especially of young and highly skilled personnel, produce another constraint on
sustainable development, namely, the need to import high-cost foreign
expertise to, in large measure, replace this significant outflow of human capital.
In addition to the aforementioned are those concerns related to, inter alia,
increasing poverty, HIV/AIDS with its depletion of the labour force and the
diversion of resources from otherwise productive pursuits, increasing crime, and
the drug problem, which present major constraints to the pursuit of sustainable
development by SIDS.
greatest incentive for the unemployed, among other social groups, to decant
into the production and trafficking of illegal drugs and other anti-social activities.
Such a development could only serve to increase the social fragility of these
states thereby accentuating all other aspects of their overall social vulnerability.
Measures of vulnerability
The construction of the index is based on the observation that income volatility
is the most apparent manifestation of vulnerability and starts by identifying
sources of this volatility. The three most important determinants of income
volatility identified by the Commonwealth Secretariat are:
The unique characteristics and vulnerabilities that SIDS face were first addressed
by the international community at the Earth Summit (United Nations (UN)
Conference on Environment and Development) in Brazil in 1992. The SIDS case
was the focus of Agenda 21, a non-binding, voluntarily implemented plan of
action of the Summit, committed to addressing the problems of sustainable
development of SIDS. This plan involved adopting methods to enable SIDS to
function and cope effectively with environmental change, and to mitigate the
impacts and reduce the threats posed to their marine and coastal resources.
Following Agenda 21, the Barbados Programme of Action was introduced in
1994, in an effort to provide further aid and support to SIDS. Its ultimate aim
was to improve sustainable development. It highlighted the challenges of
converting Agenda 21 into precise strategies, movements, and procedures at
the national, regional, and international level and listed fifteen priority areas for
specific action. Five areas were further selected by the UN General Assembly in
1999, recognising their urgency. These five were: climate change, as the rising
sea level could render some low-lying SIDS submerged; natural and
environmental disasters and climate variability, with an emphasis of improving
disaster preparedness and recovery; freshwater resources, preventing water
shortages as demand increases; coastal and marine resources, promoting the
protection of coastal ecosystems and coral reefs; energy, developing solar and
renewable energy in order to lessen dependence on imported oil; and finally
tourism, focusing on the management of the growth of the tourism industry and
the protection of the environment and cultural integrity.
6 https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/topics/sids/publications
26
Many SIDS have recognised the need to embrace sustainability through their
own internal processes, however, without external aid from the international
community, the required change will not come quickly enough. Following on the
adoption of the SAMOA Pathway, 2015 is rapidly becoming a watershed year for
global processes of importance to SIDS. Convergence is occurring across a broad
spectrum of activities as this year has seen the international community
deliberate on the Post 2015 framework for disaster risk reduction which
culminated in the adoption of the Sendai Framework, new expected agreements
in the post 2015 development agenda with Sustainable Development Goals
replacing the Millennium Development Goals. New agreements are also
expected on how development is financed and there remains expectation of a
new international agreement on climate change. Given their far-reaching
impact, these developments are critical, particularly when viewed from the
27
Can SIDS overcome their size-related vulnerabilities and grow faster and
more consistently?
For every large country like China, India, and the United States, there is a small
state like Suriname, Tuvalu, and Seychelles. Big states are a diverse lot and so
are states with populations of less than 1.5 million.
Some are rich. Some are poor. In fact, small states span the spectrum of income
levels (see table). There are high-income fuel-exporting countries, such as
Bahrain. There are also countries in the low-income group, such as Djibouti.
Similarly, social indicators reflect a wide range of development. Some small
states, such as Luxembourg, rank among the highest in the latest United Nations
Human Development Index, while others, such as Bhutan, rank among the
lowest.
Most of the small states are islands or widely dispersed multi-island states;
others are landlocked. Some are located far from major markets. The smallest
of these, known as micro-states, have populations below 200,000. About one-
fifth of the IMF’s member countries are small states.
Small they may be. But the middle-income and lower-income small states we
analyse here face complex problems. The Pacific Island of Tuvalu, for example,
with a land area of 10 square miles, is roughly one-seventh the size of
Washington, D.C. That makes it difficult to grow crops. Its neighbour, Kiribati, in
contrast, has a population of 100,000 people spread over 3.5 million square
kilometres of ocean—an area about the size of the Indian subcontinent. That
makes for a country extraordinarily difficult to administer.
28
Most Pacific island countries consist of hundreds of small islands scattered over
an area in the Pacific Ocean that occupies 15 percent of the globe’s surface. This
dispersion causes many problems, not the least of which is high trade costs. For
example, the Pacific states of Samoa and Palau are about as far apart as the east
coast of the United States and England.
29
A Common Problem
Small states have one common problem: they face constraints because of their size.
For starters, because they have tiny populations, the states cannot spread the fixed
costs of government or business over a large number of people—that is, they cannot
achieve economies of scale in the same way that larger states can. The result of
these diseconomies of scale, as economists call them, is high costs in both the public
and private sectors.
Their small size also seems to be reflected in a number of macroeconomic
characteristics:
•Narrow production base: Although their economies are not uniform—some are
commodity exporters, others are service based (mainly tourism or financial
services)—all of them face problems establishing a competitive economic base. And
where they do compete, it is typically in one or two goods or services, leaving them
vulnerable to ups and downs in a handful of industries. Tourism accounts for more
than half the foreign earnings for many of the Caribbean islands. Similarly, many
small states in the Pacific depend on one product for most of their export earnings.
In the Solomon Islands, for example, about half of export earnings come from
logging.
•Poorly developed financial sector: About half of the small states have gained
prominence as offshore financial centres. But financial institutions in offshore
financial centres typically serve non-residents. In general, the domestic financial
sectors lack depth, are concentrated, and do not provide their citizens with
adequate access to finance. The financial sectors are dominated by banks, whose
high lending rates often hinder investment. Also, because the private sectors in
small states are so tiny, commercial banks often end up financing the government—
risking their soundness by becoming heavily exposed to one borrower. This has also
complicated economic policy actions meant to lower the debt. In the highly
30
•Fixed exchange rates: Small states are more likely than larger ones to peg their
exchange rates to another currency. Many of these small states are closely tied to a
handful of larger economies that account for most of their export earnings. The peg
eliminates exchange rate volatility, which helps smooth export earnings. At the
same time, small states need to hold higher reserves than their larger brethren—
not only to defend their currencies but also to insulate themselves from adverse
outside events that can have a large negative effect on their well-being. Yet, most
have fewer reserves than considered optimal. Small states also have more limited
ability to conduct monetary policy. Five of 13 small states in the Asia-Pacific region,
for example, do not have a central bank.
•Trade openness: Small states are also more open to trade. Trade-to-GDP ratios are
much larger in smaller economies than in larger ones with similar policies. Small
states also seem to have somewhat lower trade barriers. A high degree of trade
openness often leaves the small states vulnerable to shocks from terms of trade (the
prices of exports compared with the prices of imports).
Small states face other common issues as well. Many are located in the open ocean,
which makes them prone to natural disasters (such as earthquakes and hurricanes),
and, because they are so small, typically the entire population and economy are
affected by such disasters.
Natural disasters annually cost micro-states in the Caribbean and the Pacific the
equivalent of 3 to 5 percent of GDP. At the same time, many are islands that face
particular challenges from climate change. Kiribati, for example, could be the first
country to see its entire territory disappear under water as a result of global climate
change that causes ice to melt at the polar caps, raising sea levels.
Moreover, the remoteness of many of these countries can be a problem because
the paucity of arable land makes them dependent on imported foodstuffs, which
can be very expensive.
31
Volatility reigns
But perhaps the most telling problem these states face is volatility. Small states
have been plagued by highly erratic economic growth, which in the long run
impedes growth, worsens income inequality, and increases poverty. During the
2000s, small states have had noticeably higher growth volatility than their larger
counterparts—and lower growth rates. Their current accounts—mainly the
difference between what these small states export and what they import—are
considerably more volatile than those of larger states with similar income levels.
This may reflect higher terms-of-trade volatility, which has a greater effect on
small states because of their greater trade openness. In the fiscal sector, greater
volatility is seen in both revenue and expenditures. Revenue volatility is typically
linked to greater reliance on trade taxes, which wax and wane as trade rises and
falls. Expenditure volatility is often associated with “lumpy” capital spending,
spending in response to natural disasters, and a lack of discipline related to weak
governing capacity.
32
Small states can, however, compensate for their size-related problems by taking
steps to exploit their advantages and offset their disadvantages. In general,
these states should pursue the following:
•Regional integration and cooperation: One way to offset the size disadvantage
is to create bigger markets through regional integration. Such initiatives are
most advanced in the Caribbean. For example, the Eastern Caribbean Currency
Union’s Regional Government Securities Market aims to integrate existing
national securities markets into a single regional market, helping to exploit
economies of scale in financial markets. Similarly, the Eastern Caribbean Central
33
Similarly, the World Trade Organization’s Aid for Trade initiative has encouraged
trade-related regional infrastructure. Internationally agreed debt-restructuring
and debt-relief mechanisms, such as the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
Initiative and the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative, have helped some small
states reduce their debt burden. Financial assistance is often crucial for small
states. To weather natural disasters and other external shocks, small states have
used a number of IMF financing instruments, including the Rapid Credit Facility,
a type of emergency assistance. Importantly, international institutions can
provide technical assistance and training tailored to the needs of individual
states.
Size does create constraints, but effective policies can help small states overcome
them. For example, Mauritius—a small, remote island state off the coast of eastern
Africa—was deemed a strong candidate for failure by Nobel Prize-winning
economist James Meade in the 1960s. It depended on one crop, sugar; was prone
to terms-of-trade shocks; had high levels of unemployment; and lacked natural
resources. But the country proved Meade wrong. It progressed to a well-diversified
middle-income economy that earns revenues from tourism, finance, textiles, and
advanced technology—as well as sugar. Whether measured by per capita income,
human development indicators, or governance indicators, Mauritius is among the
top African countries. The prudent policies Mauritius adopted fuelled its
34
transformation. For example, it attracted foreign direct investment to help spur its
industries and built strong institutions to support growth.
35
7.0 Conclusion
Given the limited number of SIDS common to datasets, any conclusions arising
from such a comparative analysis must be treated with caution. Keeping that
caveat in mind, two potential insights emerge from the results. The first is that,
consistent with the premise posited at the beginning of this chapter, Small Island
Developing States appear to face specific challenges unlike those encountered
by larger and more diverse states. Further, it seems that SIDS’ vulnerabilities are
likely to manifest themselves in ways other than the emergence of large-scale
violent conflict. As a result, SIDS would likely benefit from policy prescriptions
specifically tailored to their particular circumstances, with special attention paid
to the areas of economic and political vulnerability encountered by small,
remote, and underdeveloped populations. The second, and in many ways the
more surprising potential implication is that there appears to be a need to
examine the interrelationship between the literature on the Economic
Vulnerability Index further to operationalize their index, and the literature on
state fragility and conflict that informs the CIFP risk index. This gap becomes
particularly apparent in the two indices’ analysis of SIDS.
The fact that the Economic Vulnerability Index produces results virtually
independent of, or in the case of SIDS, even contrary to those of CIFP suggests
that the perceived causes of economic instability differ markedly from those of
conflict and state fragility. While the results may be at least partially because of
outliers in the limited data set, the evidence is certainly strong enough to
warrant further research. If the disconnect is confirmed in subsequent studies,
the implications for both theory and policy will be profound. In terms of theory,
the results suggest that current models of economic development and state
fragility take insufficient account of one another. An economic model that
proves unable to respond to the inherent political weakness and social tensions
within a state, or even worse, one that inadvertently hastens a state’s decline
into fragility and failure must be regarded as undesirable, regardless of its
positive effects on macroeconomic fundamentals and economic growth.
Similarly, models of state fragility must incorporate sufficient considerations of
sustained long term economic development, given its tremendous importance
36
to long-term peace and stability. While distinct, the two phenomena are
inextricably linked, and cannot be considered in complete isolation from one
another.
Similarly, on a practical level, such findings suggest that policymakers have much
to gain by considering economic vulnerability and state fragility in tandem.
Towards that end, indicator based analytical methodologies of the sort created
by CIFP may provide effective analytical tools in the policy toolbox.
the late 1980s and 1990s, Indonesia in the wake of the 1997 Asian financial crisis,
and a number of sub-Saharan African countries such as Angola and Cote d’Ivoire.
Finally, there is clearly a need for more structural data on SIDS.
Unfortunately, given the small size and unconventional political status of many
Small Island Developing States (some of which continue to defer some elements of
sovereignty to former colonial powers such as the U.K. and France, or to dominant
powers such as the U.S.), there is a dearth of reliable information on which to build
an analysis of either the fragility or the economic vulnerability of such states. So long
as this situation endures, both theoretical analysis and policy decisions regarding
SIDS will remain under-informed, and therefore problematic.