Chat with Andris Piebalgs
Posted: September 24th, 2010 | Author: Maha Rafi Atal | Filed under: Economics, Foreign Policy, Politics | Tags: African Union, aid, Andris Piebalgs, climate change, Commodities, development, ECOWAS, energy, European Commission, European Union, Forbes, G20, inflation, Millennium Development Goals, United Nations | No Comments »My post at Foreign Exchange today is an interview with Andris Piebalgs, the European Commissioner for Development. An excerpt:
“Some of your member states have expressed support for a financial transactions tax as a source of funding. What is the Commission’s view of that?
It’s very clear that official aid will need money beyond .7, and then on top of that aid we will need to raise funds for a climate change pledge. We need to start thinking as though at the end of the day somebody will count the money and if you haven’t delivered, you will be responsible for the misery in the world.
Yes, the tax is logical. Why? We tax everything else. All activities are suffering from taxation. Technically, though, it should be difficult to administer. It needs global governance, and in that, it is a test case for the G20. If they can’t do this, it is on them to propose an alternative. We could tax air tickets, say. Much simpler, but much less popular.”
I really enjoyed the whole chat, and encourage you to go read it.