Women are key to response and recovery out of the COVID-19 era: UN
CGTN
Photo taken on April 4, 2019, shows United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed speaking during a press briefing on the 2019 Financing for Sustainable Development Report, at the UN headquarters in New York, the United States. /Xinhua

Photo taken on April 4, 2019, shows United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed speaking during a press briefing on the 2019 Financing for Sustainable Development Report, at the UN headquarters in New York, the United States. /Xinhua

Young women are fighting interconnected battles for“environmental, economic and racial justice", the deputy UN chief said in a discussion on Thursday.

UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed told the second of a series of roundtable discussions with renowned women economists that she was honoured to witness the bold ideas put forward by “a generation that is confronted by a world increasingly characterized by closure, rather than openness, xenophobia, rather than tolerance, vulnerability, rather than security, and, above all, a world haunted by the existential threat of climate change".

Failure without women

While acknowledging the unfairness of their having to shoulder burdens that they did not create, she pointed out that“status, country, and identity markers”that one is born with, are“little more than a matter of chance".

"We require an intersectional lens”to overcome barriers, upheld the deputy UN chief, underscoring that "importantly", any effort that does not involve women themselves, "will ultimately fail".

Generational voice

Ms. Mohammed said that the young economists presented "concrete, tangible, and bold solutions to two pressing issues facing youth today"-namely job scarcity and climate change – calling it“a further reminder of the need for us to listen to the voices of this generation". 

"They are not the next generation", she continued, “they are the current generation and leaders, because it is in fact their world that we are building through our response and recovery to this crisis".

Noting the Financing for Development initiative at the Mimisters of Finance meeting next week and the High-Level discussions of the General Assembly that will follow, Ms. Mohammed maintained that it is“our job to do justice to these solutions and ensure that we propel them forward".

A silver lining  

The deputy UN chief highlighted a“unique moment”presented by COVID, one in which“stakeholders are willing to discuss the hard questions”as they relate to economic models and financial architecture where innovative solutions were once“relegated to the fringes of economic thought".

"This would not have been possible even a few months ago", she flagged, urging everyone to capitalize on the moment and“reorient the global financial system to make it truly work for all".

Recognizing that systemic problems will continue to persist“unless significant action is taken", she concluded her remarks by expressing confidence that“we are crafting the solutions we need for a more resilient, equal, inclusive and sustainable world as we overcome the COVID-19 crisis and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals".

(With input from the United Nations)