G7 Research Group G7 Information Centre
Summits |  Meetings |  Publications |  Research |  Search |  Home |  About the G7 Research Group
University of Toronto

A G8 Meeting That Goes Back to First Principles

David Cameron, prime minister, United Kingdom
November 21, 2012

One year after the Summer Olympics, the eyes of the world will again be on the United Kingdom next summer, as we host the Group of Eight meeting at Lough Erne in Northern Ireland.

Some people ask, does the G8 still matter, when we have a Group of 20? My answer is, yes. The G8 is a group of like-minded countries that share a belief in free enterprise as the best route to growth. As eight countries (United States, Japan, Germany, Great Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Russia) making up about half the world’s gross domestic product, the standards we set, the commitments we make, and the steps we take can help solve vital global issues, fire up economies and drive prosperity all over the world.

Lough Erne 2013 will focus on three ways in which we can support the development of open economies, open governments and open societies to unleash the power of the private sector: advancing trade, ensuring tax compliance, and promoting greater transparency.

First, trade. There is no greater stimulus for global growth than trade, and no more important battle than the fight against protectionism. The G8 has a collective responsibility to drive forward trade liberalization. I am already leading European Union efforts to finalize a free-trade agreement with Canada and to launch negotiations with Japan and the United States over the next year. I want G8 leaders to seize the opportunity of the discussion at Lough Erne to agree on how we will accelerate progress across our ambitious trade agenda. To take just one example, the EU and U.S. together make up nearly a third of all global trade. An ambitious deal between the two could provide an enormous boost to jobs and growth adding more than £50-billion to the EU economy alone.

Second, taxes. People rightly become angry when they work hard and pay their taxes, but see others not paying their fair share. So this G8 will seek to maintain the momentum generated by the G20 on information exchange and the strengthening of international tax standards. We will look to go further including, for example, on tax havens by improving the quality and quantity of tax information exchange. We will also work with developing countries to help them improve their ability to collect the tax that is due to them.

Third, transparency. The U.K. is meeting our commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of our gross national income on aid from 2013 – and we will be holding other countries to account for their promises, too. We will also be leading the way in the battle against hunger with a special event on food and nutrition a few days before the main meeting.

I believe the U.K.’s track record on aid gives it the legitimacy to use the next G8 meeting in a radically different way by supporting what I call the “golden thread” of conditions that enable open economies and open societies to drive prosperity and growth for all. These include the rule of law, the absence of conflict and corruption, and the presence of property rights and strong institutions.

Transparency and accountability are vital for this. Too often, development at the G8 has been about rich countries doing things to poor countries. At Lough Erne, we in the developed world will concentrate on issues that involve us putting our own house in order and helping developing countries to prosper. Take the issue of mineral wealth. We need to make sure that for developing countries, this is a blessing not a curse. The U.K. is leading efforts in the EU to require oil, gas and mining companies to publish key financial information for each country and project they work on. I want this G8 to drive greater transparency around the globe so that revenues from oil, gas and mining can help developing countries to forge a path to sustainable growth, instead of fuelling conflict and corruption.

These defining advances in trade, tax and transparency could lay the foundations of long-term growth and prosperity for generations to come. But to achieve them we also need to cut through the bureaucracy of traditional international summits.

So Lough Erne 2013 will return the G8 to its roots. The original leaders’ fireside chat, which inspired today’s G8 gatherings, took place at the Château de Rambouillet in 1975, organized by the French president to address worldwide economic problems. They held searching discussions, and issued a succinct declaration only 15 paragraphs long.

Nearly 40 years on, we will go back to those first principles. There will be no lengthy communiqué. No armies of officials telling each other what each of their leaders think. We will build on the approach taken by President Obama at Camp David this year: one table and one conversation, with G8 leaders holding each other to account and ensuring that good intentions become vital actions to advance growth and prosperity.

I look forward to welcoming my fellow leaders to Lough Erne and to showcasing Northern Ireland as a modern and dynamic part of the United Kingdom that is open for business, with huge potential for investment and tourism.

Northern Ireland’s transformation over the last two decades was made possible by the courage of many people across all sections of its community. Their determination and leadership inspired the world. We must show the same resolve to make sure this G8 delivers growth and prosperity for the United Kingdom and for the world.

Sources: The Globe and Mail, EUObserver


G7 Information Centre

Top of Page
This Information System is provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and the G7 Research Group at the University of Toronto.
Please send comments to: g7@utoronto.ca
This page was last updated August 15, 2024.

All contents copyright © 2024. University of Toronto unless otherwise stated. All rights reserved.