缅北禁地

UNCTAD

The United Nations Commission on Science and Technology for Development convenes from 17 to 21 May, bringing together 缅北禁地leaders, led by Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, scientists, including a Nobel laureate, and other experts to explore how new technologies can contribute to a sustainable and resilient COVID-19 recovery for all.

A finalist of 鈥檚 award for women in business gets $10 million from her government to build a fresh juice factory that will promote sustainable agriculture and improve livelihoods in North Uganda. Julian Omalla produces one of Uganda鈥檚 most popular fruit drinks, Cheers, boasting a loyal customer base of over 5 million people. Affectionately known by many as 鈥淢ama Cheers鈥, the 56-year-old founder and chief executive is one of the east African nation鈥檚 foremost female entrepreneurs.

The global market for cashews is booming, but the African countries growing more than half the world鈥檚 supply aren鈥檛 cashing in, an says, due to their lack of processing industries. .

Family businesses employ 60% of the world鈥檚 workforce and contribute over 70% of global GDP. And collectively they have immense financial resources to invest in the Sustainable Development Goals. UNCTAD鈥檚 new Family Businesses for Sustainable Development initiative harnesses their potential to be a force for good and help build a transformative and sustainable future. 

Global trade in plastics tops a whopping $1 trillion each year, or 5% of total merchandise trade. This is 40% higher than previous estimates and involves virtually all nations. The fresh insights into the massive extent of plastics in world trade have emerged from a new research paper, 鈥.鈥 The study is the first attempt to map and quantify global trade flows across the entire life cycle of plastics 鈥 from raw inputs to final products and waste.

The gigantic cargo ship that ran aground and blocked the Suez Canal last week is afloat once again after a Herculean salvage operation, but the damage to global trade will take months to fix.

Zambia鈥檚 coronavirus lockdown shut down some more traditional businesses, but for e-commerce firms this was their chance to scale up operations. AfriDelivery, a food delivery service with big dreams of becoming a business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce platform, recorded 100% growth in annual terms in 2020. Despite the opportunities, the pandemic also brought many challenges and unforeseen costs for e-commerce firms. UNCTAD is working to ensure e-commerce is mainstreamed into national development plans and development partners鈥 cooperation frameworks.

New projections show stronger growth than expected in 2021, but the untackled problems of inequality, indebtedness and weak investment threaten hopes for a more resilient future. The global economy is set to grow by 4.7% this year, faster than predicted in September (4.3%), thanks in part to a stronger recovery in the United States, where progress in distributing vaccines and a fresh fiscal stimulus of $1.9 trillion are expected to boost consumer spending, says the to 鈥檚 Trade and Development Report 2020.

Charity Chimphamba, a Malawian small-scale trader, had a thriving business before the COVID-19 pandemic struck. In the wake of COVID-19, Ms. Chimphamba鈥檚 revenue fell by 60%, mainly due to higher costs of buying goods through transport companies and sourcing them locally. Ms. Chimphamba was among 131 small-scale cross-border traders, 120 of them women, who attended UNCTAD training workshops held in border towns of Malawi, Tanzania and Zambia in February.

With the help of partners, has used blockchain technology to to raise donations of cryptocurrencies for its work. Beyond financial applications an points at blockchain鈥檚 potential towards sustainable development. UNCTAD鈥檚 says frontier technologies such as blockchain could promote development if governments implement policies that maximize their potential benefits, while mitigating harmful outcomes. Otherwise, they could worsen existing inequalities, as has occurred with previous waves of technological change.

A few developing nations are exhibiting stronger capabilities to use, adopt and adapt frontier technologies than their per capita GDPs would suggest, but most are lagging behind, according to an index of 158 countries in UNCTAD鈥檚 T. Frontier technologies are those that take advantage of digitalization and connectivity. They include artificial intelligence (AI), the internet of things, big data, blockchain, 5G, 3D printing, robotics, drones, gene editing, nanotechnology and solar photovoltaic.

The  is an  online portal with publications, manuals, resources and tools that allow policymakers to measure their countries鈥 performance in achieving their national development goals, as well as their ability to meet the UN鈥檚 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).