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TCDC
- From Concept to Action
The symbol of Technical
Co-operation among Developing Countries, or TCDC, is a bridge joining the countries
and people of the Southern Hemisphere. The centre of the symbol - - where the
Southern, Northern, Eastern and Western parts of the world all join - - represents
the further and ultimate objective of TCDC: the enhancement of truly global
partnership for development.
ORIGINS
"Societies
can interact only as far as their technical capacity allows them to. If they
do not have the means for intellectual communication, if their people and goods
cannot overcome the natural and man-made barriers setting them apart, their
influences on each other are necessarily limited. Such is the case now among
the developing countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America. The bridging of
their diversity is the subject matter of TCDC."
From Bridges
Across the South, by B.P. Menon, 1980
Technical cooperation
is as old as the earliest forms of intellectual and technical interchange between
human societies. It can be traced back several thousand years to the movement
of scholars and merchants, craftspeople and explorers - envoys among the ancient
civilizations of Asia, the Arab world, Africa and the Americas. The seeds of
many present-day technologies can be found in these cultural ancestors of today's
Third World.
Beginning in the
early fifteenth century, however, the free flow of knowledge, skills and commodities
within and between countries of the South was stifled by colonialism. Northern
political, legal, economic and educational models were imposed on the colonies,
and investment in transportation and communications concentrated on strengthening
North-South routes. The results have lingered. It was not long ago, for example,
that a telephone call from Senegal to neighbouring Gambia required routing through
Paris. Indeed, telecommunications in many countries are still routed through
the former "motherland". In addition, travel between many countries
of the South is still very cumbersome.
Gradually, however,
the tide has begun to turn. Developing countries began re-establishing ties
in the 1950s and 1960s, as large numbers of former colonies gained independence.
Many of them enhanced their technical resources, becoming good sources of high-level
expertise, admirable research capacity and excellent training opportunities.
Developing countries also developed their technology and capacity to supply
quality equipment, both of which were usually more appropriate for their own
needs. Along with these initiatives came the growing awareness that South-South
exchange of ideas, information, technologies and solutions might, in many cases,
be more appropriate and more consistent with developing countries' development
goals than other forms of assistance.
Recognizing the
need for this renewed contact, the United Nations formalized its support for
southern "relinking" in the early 1970s under the rubric of technical
cooperation among developing countries (TCDC). The landmark event providing
substance and documentation for this support was the United Nations Conference
on TCDC, held in Buenos Aires in 1978.
Top
A
GLOBAL INFRASTRUCTURE
"Given the
changes in the structure of international economic relations, TCDC and South-South
cooperation in general, will become an increasingly important aspect in multilateral
technical cooperation."
Denis Benn,
Director
Special Unit for TCDC
United Nations Development Programme
May 1995
The Plan of Action
that emerged from the Buenos Aires Conference, which was endorsed by the United
Nations General Assembly, made 38 practical recommendations that form the global
framework for South-South cooperation today.
The foremost
objective, stated in the Buenos Aires Plan of Action, is "to foster
the self-reliance of developing countries through the enhancement of their creative
capacity to find solutions to their development problems in keeping with their
own aspirations, values and special needs."
Furthermore, the
Plan of Action states that TCDC should "promote and strengthen collective
self-reliance among developing countries through exchanges of experience, the
pooling, sharing and utilization of their technical resources, and the development
of their complementary capacities." The Plan of Action emphasized that
TCDC was not an end in itself; nor is it a substitute for traditional, or North-South,
cooperation. Rather, TCDC is recognized as a dimension that adds to the overall
quantity and quality of development assistance. Action at the national level
Structural arrangements for TCDC vary from country to country.
The formal establishment
of a national institution responsible for TCDC within the country - known as
the TCDC "focal point" - and actively supported by the highest levels
of Government, is usually a first step in organizing a framework for TCDC at
the country level. Sometimes the focal point is a special unit or a committee
with representatives from different ministries and departments; in a few countries
it is just one official. In most countries it comes under the aid coordinating
authority, usually the Ministry of Economic Affairs or Planning. In others,
it is linked to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The national focal
point serves as a line of communication to various ministries or government
departments, to chambers of commerce and public and private enterprises and
institutions, to non-governmental and intergovernmental organizations, and to
TCDC focal points in other developing countries and the United Nations system.
The functions of the national focal point can include
- Formulating
national policies and mechanisms for TCDC;
- Facilitating
coordination among various sectoral ministries, departments and other entities
engaged in TCDC activities, as well as between the Government and the private
sector;
- Organizing TCDC
orientation seminars, training courses and study tours;
- Serving as a
liaison between national enterprises and their foreign counterparts involved
in TCDC;
- Assessing the
costs, benefits and overall impact of TCDC on a country's development needs;
- Providing guidance
in the development of a national TCDC information network. An essential task
is to maintain an inventory of the country's needs and the domestic resources
that it is willing to share with other developing countries. This information
can be compiled in collaboration with sectoral ministries and public and private
institutions and it can be linked to regional, interregional or global TCDC
networks.
Top
GLOBAL
SUPPORT
TCDC is a cooperative
activity for development between two or more developing countries. It is initiated,
organized, managed and principally financed by developing countries themselves.
While South-South
cooperation entails direct sharing or exchange among developing countries, the
Buenos Aires Plan of Action outlines the supporting role of Governments of developed
countries and of intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
At the global level, it calls for the "permeation of the spirit of TCDC"
throughout the programmes and structure of the United Nations system.
Along with setting
up an active focal point invested with adequate authority and provided with
resources, the highest priority is placed on the articulation of a comprehensive
national TCDC policy. This is intended to demonstrate the commitment of the
nation to the TCDC modality and facilitate its application. In 1992, the Economic
and Social Council of the United Nations declared that TCDC should be the modality
of "first consideration" in national planning exercises. This exhortation
will hold true only if it is firmly reflected in the national policies of the
developing countries themselves.
The role of
UNDP
The United Nations
General Assembly has assigned the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
the lead role for the promotion and support of TCDC within the overall United
Nations development system.
As the centre-piece
for technical cooperation in this system, UNDP has central funding and coordination
responsibilities for a large portion of United Nations technical assistance.
This includes assistance to Governments in multisectoral country programmes
as well as regional, interregional and global programmes. Through its accumulated
operational experience and its network of offices in 130 developing countries,
UNDP is in a unique position to guide and assist developing countries to undertake
cooperative endeavours. This can include:
- Identifying
sectoral needs that could be met through TCDC modalities;
- Locating expertise,
training facilities, equipment and services in developing countries that could
be made available on a TCDC basis;
- Establishing
functional contacts among developing countries, including establishment of
networks and training arrangements;
- Promoting South-South
exchanges by means of orientation and training seminars and workshops, study
tours and other activities;
- Providing catalytic
financing for results-oriented TCDC activities.
The Special
Unit for TCDC
As mandated by
the General Assembly, UNDP carries out its functions as the lead organization
for TCDC through a Special Unit attached to the Office of the Administrator.
The Special Unit for TCDC encourages new policies and innovative practices throughout
the United Nations system to integrate TCDC into mainstream development activities.
The Unit is also
available to help countries directly in the implementation of TCDC. Such assistance
can include
- Strengthening
national TCDC focal points;
- Assisting in
the development of TCDC policies, legislation, procedures and information
systems at the country level.
Within this framework,
assistance for TCDC from the United Nations system can take the form of "promotional"
or "operational" activities. Promotional activities are intended to
spread the word about TCDC, make the concept popular, demonstrate its potential
and bring the cooperating partners together. Promotion can also take the form
of activities to support TCDC, such as enhancing the technical resources of
participating countries and their capacity to promote and apply TCDC. Operational
activities are a step forward from promotional and supportive activities, whereby
TCDC projects are actually put into practice. The line of demarcation between
one kind of activity and the other is often thin and the distinction can become
blurred. One of the most common examples of this, the capacities and needs matching
exercise, illustrates a TCDC subprogramme supported by the Special Unit for
TCDC. Parties in the exercise get to know the strengths and weaknesses of one
another, discover opportunities for cooperation, and frequently undertake to
do so within the framework of bilateral or multilateral agreements.
The Special Unit
also provides assistance for:
- Organizing TCDC
training, sensitization and orientation programmes;
- Assisting developing
countries, at their request, in TCDC programming;
- Developing and
managing the TCDC Information Referral System (TCDC-INRES) and serving as
a clearing-house for TCDC information;
- Mobilizing supplementary
financing for TCDC;
- Carrying out
research, studies and analyses on TCDC issues and problems;
- Monitoring TCDC
activities worldwide and reporting on progress made to the biennial sessions
of the United Nations High-level Committee on the Review of TCDC, comprised
of all countries participating in the UNDP system;
- Assisting developing
countries, at their request, in organizing workshops or symposia to address
specific issues of TCDC and consider technologies or systems that can promote
TCDC and organizing capacities and needs matching exercises;
- Assisting developing
countries, at their request, in trying out a variety of mechanisms - including
studies, networking, brainstorming, action research, mutual technical help
and replication of experiences - intended to share progress in collaborative
resolution of common problems.
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INFORMATRION
"Each developing
country should take adequate steps to strengthen the gathering, processing and
dissemination of information covering the availability of national capacities,
knowledge and experience for application and use in TCDC, if necessary with
the support of the information systems of the United Nations development system,
and particularly of the Information Referral System of the United Nations Development
Programme, as well as official, professional and other sources."
From recommendation
4 of the Buenos Aires Plan of Action
Information:
A TCDC switchboard for all
The countries of
the North are linked by a vast information "infrastructure" that contributes
to their individual and collective strength. Complex data flow across the developed
world 24 hours a day, providing updates and analyses of commodities and stocks,
tariffs on manufactures, technology patents, insurance costs, capital loan interest
rates and international monetary movements. Moreover, the industrialized countries
rely on intricate networks of intellectual resources, such as universities,
think-tanks and research foundations, together with hundreds of technical journals
and transnational computer grids.
Accurate, current
information is a prerequisite for development in today's interconnected world.
Opening channels of contact and communication among developing countries involves
the compilation of previously unavailable data from and for developing countries
themselves. This information is now available through hundreds of specialized
information systems - in virtually every area of economic and social activity.
Information systems, particularly the TCDC-INRES South-South database, have
been devised specifically to promote South-South exchanges.
Consider these
examples of TCDC-INRES at work in providing diverse individuals the information
they need.
- Getaneh Gobezie,
a researcher from the interior of Ethiopia, receives information on institutions
in other developing countries dealing with rural development so that he can
get in touch with them.
- Mushtaq Ahmed,
working for a private company in Lahore, receives information on suppliers
of hydrogen peroxide plant as well as on the technology of rayon grade pulp
production from biogas.
- Dr. Klaus Hortsmann
from Germany receives information on environmental training facilities in
developing countries so that the German Foundation for International Development
can set up collaborative training programmes.
- Irma Pirtskhalaichvili,
working in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Georgia, gets information on
institutions dealing with women in development.
- Faisal Hasan
Abas from Khartoum wants to help the new nation of Eritrea through his NGO,
the Sudan-Eritrea Friendship Association, and receives information on developing
country institutions working in agriculture, health and communications.
TCDC-INRES: From
humble beginnings to a promising future TCDC-INRES began as a manually operated
service in 1978. The database was placed on a mainframe computer in 1984 and
registration of capacities rose sharply from 2,400 to 4,000 by 1988. Nonetheless,
INRES remained a centralized switchboard, and, as such, was not easily accessible
by many users. The database was transferred to microcomputer in 1989 and a decentralization
programme was launched the following year. The inquiries reached a level of
100 a month in 1991; the examples set out above represent a sample of those
handled in 1994.
More recently,
a dramatic transformation has occurred in the continuing TCDC-INRES evolution.
First, conversion of the main database to a Microsoft Windows database (ACCESS
programme), commenced in 1993, has been completed. Secondly, all registrations
are being updated through country compilations in the field. By early 1995,
32 country studies had been completed and others will be covered in 1996. Thirdly,
a system has been put in place to update data every three years, with outdated
data similarly discarded. Fourthly, and most important, the database - renamed
"INRES-Lite" - has been distributed in the form of desktop computer
diskettes to 500 locations comprising UNDP field offices, United Nations organizations
and national TCDC focal points. By 1996, the INRES database will be accessible
through Internet, with a global user network of millions.
Over the years,
a good deal of investment has gone into TCDC- INRES and ongoing activities continue
to update its registration of institutions. The database is already very rich
on training facilities of all kinds. In eight broad sectors - education, agriculture,
social services, health, architecture, management, training, and information
technology - the training offered courses number over 11,000. It is proposed
to expand TCDC-INRES into a multi-dimensional database which will include information
not only on institutional capacities, but individual experts, centres of excellence
and innovative project experiences that can be transferred among developing
countries.
Many agencies and
organizations of the United Nations system have their own information storage
systems. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has
documented many successful technologies of the South, and the United Nations
Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) has useful information on the industrial
sector as a whole. On environmental issues, the Sustainable Development Network
has compiled a wealth of information. Many organizations have rosters of experts
at national or regional levels. TCDC-INRES is now in a position to incorporate
a great deal of this information and make it easily available to users. The
commissioning of the Group of 77 Trade Information Network, long supported and
now being pilot tested in 10 centres, will add to the information revolution
in the South. The power of easily accessible and well-checked information has
an invaluable contribution to make, both to TCDC and to the broader process
of economic cooperation among developing countries (ECDC).
Institutions and
professional associations in developing countries can supply information for
registering their capacities with the TCDC-INRES database by filling out forms
provided by the UNDP country offices in the field or by the Special Unit for
TCDC in New York. Individuals or institutions interested in information on any
kind of capacity in the South can obtain such information from the Special Unit
for TCDC in New York; and since March 1995 it has also been possible to acquire
the information directly from UNDP Resident Representatives and national TCDC
focal points. While a standard form is provided by UNDP for making such inquiries,
questions can be framed in any way the inquirer wants.
Cooperation South
Cooperation South is a development journal published as a magazine
by UNDP in response to the recommendations contained in the Buenos Aires Plan
of Action calling for greater information support for TCDC.
In 1984, Cooperation
South transformed the original black-and-white news bulletin "TCDC
News", first published in 1979, into a colourful, in-depth magazine intended
for use by develop-ment professionals and other interested readers. The magazine
is targeted at those directly engaged in TCDC and other interested audiences,
with a varied list of subscribers numbering about 36,000. The journal comments
on a wide range of South-South issues and provides news on TCDC activities.
It invites readers to share their viewpoints and experiences. The magazine is
available in English, French, Spanish and Arabic.
To receive the
publication on a regular basis, please write to
The Editor, Cooperation South
UNDP Special Unit for TCDC
One United Nations Plaza
New York, N.Y. 10017
United States of America
Fax: (212) 906-6429
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FINANCING
FOR TCDC
"... the financing
of TCDC activities is primarily the responsibility of developing countries themselves,
it will nevertheless be necessary for the developed countries and the United
Nations development system to support these activities financially without prejudice
to the decision-making control by the developing countries of these TCDC activities."
From recommendation
38 of the Buenos Aires Plan of Action
Financing
for TCDC
TCDC's underlying
philosophy and ultimate development goal is self-reliance, and participa-ting
countries are expected to rely primarily on their own resources to fund TCDC
activities. Nevertheless, supplementary financing for TCDC is available from
a variety of sources, which can be drawn upon as an alternative or in a combination.
Financing
from UNDP
Country programme
funds
A country's "Indicative
Planning Figure" (IPF) is the projected level of funding for technical
assistance that will be available to that country from UNDP over a five-year
planning cycle, subject to the overall availability of United Nations funds.
Under this arrangement, developing countries are permitted to use an unlimited
portion of their IPF funds for projects or project components from which they
benefit on a TCDC basis. Many countries are utilising their IPF resources for
the promotion of TCDC.
In addition to
integrating TCDC components into country projects formulated in the normal way,
countries often choose to design one TCDC "umbrella" project under
the country IPF. This is a flexible means of financing multiple TCDC activities
and reducing administrative bottlenecks. A number of countries are now making
creative use of these umbrella projects and expanding their sphere of developing
country contacts.
In fact, in the
course of the past two decades the overall level of South-South cooperation
activities has vastly expanded, with most of it occurring by way of either bilateral
arrangements or through regional or subregional initiatives. A large number
of Governments in the South make provision in their annual budgets to promote
TCDC, usually as in-kind exchanges, but almost invariably they are dependent
on additional sources of financing. Private enterprises are also heavily involved
in TCDC and they try to meet the costs involved as much as they can.
External resources
for supplementary financing of TCDC come from a variety of sources. In addition
to UNDP and other organizations of the United Nations system, bilateral donors,
international and regional development finance institutions, charitable foundations
and NGOs are also active in supporting TCDC.
Intercountry
programme funds
Complementing its
funding for country-specific projects, UNDP also funds regional, interregional
and global projects. These promote TCDC in a number of ways. They may, for example,
strengthen regional and subregional groupings, set up information networks,
support intercountry research and training institutions, or facilitate the exchange
of development approaches and experiences through workshops and seminars. These
projects cover a wide range of fields, including river basin and water resources
management; high-tech and other appropriate technologies; innovative, non-formal
education; and disease control.
UNDP's regional
programmes are formulated in consultation with regional and subregional groupings.
Developing countries, therefore, can make regional project proposals to UNDP
through these larger groupings.
Special Programme
Resources
UNDP's Special
Programme Resources (SPRs) are increasingly being applied to developing new
and innovative programmes and approaches.
Beginning in 1983,
a first-time allocation for promotion of action-oriented TCDC activities was
made from SPRs. In the fifth programming cycle (1992-1996), additional SPR funds
were allocated for TCDC, although a subsequent United Nations resources shortfall
reduced the allocation by 20 per cent. During the first year of the cycle, SPRs
have been used in four subprogrammes supporting a wide variety of TCDC activities.
Most prominent are promotional activities; these include sensitization and orientation
programmes, workshops and seminars on technologies and systems, meetings or
studies for seeking solutions to common problems, research and studies on new
approaches and new ideas for cooperation, organizing capacities and needs matching
exercises, and compiling information on capacities of the South and its subsequent
dissemination. In addition, SPR funds are also applied against supportive activities;
these include the strengthening of institutions in the South so that they can
undertake TCDC, setting up of networks or twinning arrangements so that institutions
can enhance their capacities and exchange experiences, and information support
through pamphlets, audiovisual presentations and publications. Many of these
activities generate demand for the actual application of the TCDC modality at
an operational level, thus increasing the use of IPF resources for TCDC.
Other sources
of financing
In addition to
UNDP, most other organizations and agencies of the United Nations system also
support TCDC from their regular resources, as well as from trust funds. The
Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD), the International Labour Organization (ILO), the International
Maritime Organization (IMO), the United Nations Industrial Development Organization
(UNIDO), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO), the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the Universal Postal Union
(UPU), the World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Meteorological Organization
(WMO) give special attention to TCDC, and some of them have separate allocations
for such cooperation.
Most agencies have
their own TCDC focal point to promote and coordinate TCDC activities. International
and regional development finance institutions also support TCDC. In particular,
the Inter-American Development Bank and the Islamic Development Bank give special
attention to TCDC.
Other sources of
supplementary financing are bilateral donors, such as foundations (for example,
the Ford, Rockefeller and Kellogg Foundations), semi-governmental research and
development institutions in the North (for example, the International Development
Research Centre of Canada, the Swedish Agency for Research Cooperation with
Developing Countries, the German Foundation for International Development and
the Japanese International Cooperation Agency) and international NGOs.
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TCDC
AT WORK IN THE WORLD
"The Economic
and Social Council calls upon all parties in the development effort to make
concerted, planned and vigorous endeavours to benefit from utilization of the
capacities of developing countries, by giving their full support and first consideration
to the use of the modality of technical cooperation among developing countries.
ECOSOC Resolution
1992/41
July 1992
TCDC at work
in the world
How is TCDC promoted,
how do countries get to know the capacities of their peers and how do development
practitioners, private or public, get together? The United Nations development
system as a whole, and UNDP in particular, play a significant role in this process.
- By providing
easier access to an expanded database, INRES-Lite is making the capacities
of developing countries more widely known.
- The Special
Unit for TCDC has evolved a number of carefully structured mechanisms for
getting partners together and generating interest in the capacities and needs
of others. These are known as capacities and needs matching exercises (CNMs)
and result in agreements for TCDC among participating countries.
- Workshops,
studies and institutional and programme support to centres of excellence are
among the measures taken by the Special Unit to help the South develop and
advertise its own capacities and technologies.
- A number of
mechanisms to seek solutions to common problems have been developed by the
Special Unit, including case studies, brainstorming, working groups, pilot
projects and networking. Selection of the most suitable mechanism is based
on how the venture proceeds, but increasingly a longer-term intervention approach
is being applied.
- Capacity enhancement
is promoted through networking and twinning arrangements.
TCDC in operation
Technical cooperation
is, by its very nature, promotional. It aims to build the capacities for economic
development to take place. Indeed, in many cases, TCDC provides a viable means
of problem resolution. The following examples of TCDC came about as a result
of workshops and capacities and needs matching exercises organized by the Special
Unit for TCDC.
- Ghana is adapting
the fish-smoking techniques of Senegal. The Senegalese techniques are suitable
for the traditional communities of west Africa and meet the taste preferences
of the local population.
- Preservation
of potatoes under modern refrigeration processes causes weight loss, with
attendant implications for sugar content. Peru has a traditional way of preventing
such weight loss, which Colombia, Cuba and Guatemala are trying to acquire.
- Widely dispersed
countries such as Fiji, Nepal, Peru and the United Republic of Tanzania have
been undertaking mini-hydro projects to meet the needs of isolated and rural
areas. The Hangzhou Hydro-power Research Centre of China has been promoting
the case for mini-hydro stations.
- The first capacities
and needs matching exercise (CNM) organized by UNDP - in China in 1983 - made
the Wuxi Regional Centre for Integrated Fish Farming internationally known.
Thailand and Turkey have benefited from technical cooperation with China on
fish farming through both bilateral and other contacts. Further requests for
this expertise were made at an exercise in September 1994 in Bangladesh.
- In Jaipur,
India, Dr. Pramud Karan Sethi and his associates developed a simple, flexible
and inexpensive foot-replacement prosthesis. The "Jaipur foot" was
vastly improved in the 1980s and the technology has been transferred to Malaysia
and Nicaragua.
- India's Mahatma
Gandhi Institute of Rural Energy Planning at Bakoli on the outskirts of Delhi
hosted an interregional meeting early in 1994, which prepared a blueprint
for rural energy planning.
- GLARES, a Latin
American network on rural energy for sustainable development, has issued a
handbook on rural energy planning. In November 1992, 19 Latin American and
Caribbean countries met in Buenos Aires to agree on an agenda for cooperation,
further progress having been made possible by the meeting at Bakoli. Solar
cookers are being promoted in Latin America by a group of NGOs, and in India
by a private firm, Solker Enterprises of Madras, with support from the Government.
Biogas technology is moving from market to market, from China to Brazil and
Costa Rica and from India through an NGO, AFPRO, to Cambodia.
- Regional organizations,
together with UNESCO and UNDP, have joined together to bring about health
technology development in Latin America. Self-reliance in basic health-care
supplies, harmonization of rules and regulations, cooperation in education,
research and management, and a regional information network are some of the
aims of the undertaking.
- Aid coordination
and management have assumed greater significance in a time of diminishing
availability of aid resources. It is especially vital and urgent for the new
transitional economies. The Special Unit for TCDC has assisted in several
efforts to promote increased awareness of the importance of TCDC in this area.
Meetings were held in Poland in September 1991, in Malta in June 1993 and
in Turkey in October 1994. Negotiations have been sponsored to establish bilateral
training programmes and a regional programme for diplomatic training. Other
countries are involved in similar efforts. In November 1992, a number of countries
assembled in Seychelles and agreed to set up networking arrangements, Chile
has taken a leading role in documenting experiences of 8 Latin American countries
and in January 1994, 12 Arab countries gathered at Amman, where Chile, Malawi
and Turkey shared their experiences.
- TCDC contacts
often lead to greater overall economic cooperation. Capacities and needs matching
exercises and bilateral contacts have often led to expansion of trade between
developing countries. Examples include construction by China of an irrigation
dam in Turkey, the establishment of a network of independently powered television
relay units suitable for the remote, mountainous regions of Yemen by experts
from Yugoslavia in the mid-1980s, the setting up of a dairy cattle breeding
farm and an institute of pasture management by Brazil in the United Republic
of Tanzania and importation by Barbados of techniques of low-cost housing
from Kenya.
- "Operation
Ear-lift", first conducted in Kenya in 1987 and then in the Lao People's
Democratic Republic in 1989 by a Thai mobile unit for hearing treatment, was
set up by Dr. Sylaveth Lekagul as a private voluntary enterprise in the early
1970s. The effort received support from other surgeons in Thailand and recognition
from the Thai Government in the 1980s. Kenya has set up its own ear-testing
and surgery service, using instruments and techniques developed by the Thai
surgeon.
New Directions
SU/TCDC intends
in the future to promote a more strategic approach to TCDC by supporting initiatives
in priority areas which will have a major development impact on a large number
of developing countries. It will also seek to put in place suitable institutional
and financial arrangements to support this new policy and operational thrust.
Some notable
recent initiatives
UNDP is constantly
looking for new ways to promote TCDC, both in its own programmes and in the
work of other organizations, particularly those of national Governments and
institutions. Among some of the more noteworthy recent initiatives are:
- An annual Group
of 77 UNDP Award for TCDC/ECDC for a proposal from an individual, group or
institution in a developing country that is likely to make the greatest contribution
to the promotion of TCDC/ECDC. The award will be presented during the annual
ministerial meeting of the Group of 77.
- An initiative
to encourage technical and economic cooperation between Asian and African
countries based on the decisions adopted at the Asia-Africa Forum held in
Bandung in December 1994.
- In 1993, UNDP
decided to make three research grants for joint projects by Asian and Amazonian
ethno-botanists. The proposal must be jointly prepared by two researchers
and supported by at least two institutions, one from each region. The researchers
can work together in the two regions or they can do it in parallel in their
own regions.
- The preparation
of a feasibility study on a Small Island Developing States Technical Assistance
Programme (SIDS/TAP) and the implementation of the programme in keeping with
the decisions of the UN General Assembly on the subject.
- The economies
in transition face a number of challenges in seeking to transform themselves
into market economies and to become fully integrated into the world economy.
Dealing with international monetary and financial institutions and donor countries
of the western world is a new experience for them. In order to assist in this
effort assistance is being provided through the Special Unit for TCDC to facilitate
exchanges between the CIS countries and Latin America.
By acquiring the
technology and capacities to satisfy their own needs, developing countries can
give impetus to sustainable economic growth and development. Other developing
countries share not only understanding of needs, but also the vision necessary
to strive for the capacity to fulfill them. That is the essence and reality
of TCDC.
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