G20 Hangzhou Summit leaders’ communique - Annex
Agreed documents
The following documents agreed by the G20 support our Communique:
- G20 Blueprint on Innovative Growth
- G20 2016 Innovation Action Plan
- G20 New Industrial Revolution Action Plan
- G20 Digital Economy Development and Cooperation Initiative
- Hangzhou Action Plan
- Hangzhou Accountability Assessment Report
- G20 Enhanced Structural Reforms Agenda
- G20 High Level Principles on Cooperation on Persons Sought for Corruption and Asset Recovery
- G20 2017-2018 Anti-Corruption Action Plan
- G20 Strategy for Global Trade Growth
- G20 Guiding Principles for Global Investment Policymaking
- Terms of Reference of the G20 Trade and Investment Working Group
- G20 Action Plan on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
- Hangzhou Comprehensive Accountability Report on G20 Development Commitments
- Presidency Statement on Climate Change at the G20 Sherpa Meeting
- G20 Agenda Toward a More Stable and Resilient International Financial Architecture
- G20 Initiative on Supporting Industrialization in Africa and LDCs
- MDBs’ Joint Declaration of Aspirations on Actions to Support Infrastructure Investment
- Global Infrastructure Connectivity Alliance Initiative
- G20/OECD Guidance Note on Diversification of Financial Instrument for Infrastructure and SMEs
- Global Infrastructure Hub Report on Annotated Public Private Partnership Risk Allocation Matrices
- FSB Chair’s Letter to G20 Leaders
- IMF-FSB-BIS Report on Elements of Effective Macro-prudential Policies: Lessons from International Experience
- FSB Annual Report to the G20 on the Implementation and Effects of the G20 Financial Regulatory Reforms
- G20 High-Level Principles for Digital Financial Inclusion
- G20 Financial Inclusion Indicators (2016 Update)
- G20 Action Plan on SME Financing: Implementation Framework
- G20 Entrepreneurship Action Plan
- G20 Initiative to Promote Quality Apprenticeship
- G20 Inclusive Business Report for the 2016 Summit
- Enhancing Energy Access in Asia and the Pacific: Key Challenges and G20 Voluntary Collaboration Action Plan
- G20 Voluntary Action Plan on Renewable Energy
- G20 Energy Efficiency Leading Program
- G20 Green Finance Synthesis Report
- Climate Finance Study Group Report on “Promoting Efficient and Transparent Provision and Mobilization of Climate Finance to Enhance Ambition of Mitigation and Adaptation Actions”
- Climate Finance Study Group Outlook on “Mainstreaming Climate Change Considerations into Development Assistance and Climate Finance Programs”
- Good Practices on Family Farming and Smallholder Agriculture
Ministerial statements
- Communique of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting, Shanghai, 26-27 February
- Communique of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting, Washington D.C, 14-15 April
- Communique of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting, Chengdu, 23-24 July
- G20 Trade Ministers Meeting Statement, Shanghai, 9-10 July
- G20 Labor and Employment Ministers Declaration, Beijing, 12-13 July
- G20 Agriculture Ministers Meeting Communique, Xian, 3 June
- G20 Energy Ministerial Meeting Beijing Communique, Beijing, 29-30 June
Working Group Documents
Employment Working Group
- Policy Recommendations to Enhance Employability
- Sustainable Wage Policy Principles
- Policy Recommendations for Promoting More Equitable and Sustainable Social Protection Systems
Framework Working Group
- Quantifying the Implementation of G20 Members’ Growth Strategies (IMF-OECD Note)
Infrastructure and Investment Working Group
- G20/OECD Progress Report on the Implementation of the G20/OECD Principles of Corporate Governance
- G20/OECD Progress Report on the Development of Effective Approaches to Support the Implementation of the G20/OECD High Level Principles on SME Financing
- MDB Response to the G20 MDB Balance Sheet Optimization Action Plan
International Financial Architecture Working Group
- G20 International Financial Architecture Working Group 2016 Final Report
Global Partnership for Financial Inclusion (GPFI)
- GPFI 2016 Progress Report
- GPFI 2016 White Paper: Global Standard-Setting Bodies and Financial Inclusion – The Evolving Landscape
- 2016 Update to Leaders on Progress Towards the G20 Remittance Target
- G20/OECD INFE Core Competencies Framework on Financial Literacy for Adults
- G20/OECD INFE Ensuring Financial Education and Consumer Protection for All in the Digital Age
Supporting documents
We welcome the delivery of the following documents:
- G20 Members’ 2016 Growth Strategies (update), September 2016
- IMF Surveillance Note
- IMF Note on Reinvigorating Trade to Support Growth: A Path Forward
- IMF Note on A Framework for Structural Reforms
- G20/GIH Knowledge Sharing Report
- G20/OECD Support Note on Diversification of Financial Instruments for Infrastructure
- G20/OECD Support Note on Diversification of Financial Instruments for SMEs
- IMF Staff Note: The Role of the SDR-Initial Considerations
- BCBS Report to G20 Leaders – Implementation of Basel Standards
- FSB Progress Report on Resolution: Resilience through Resolvability – Moving from Policy Design to Implementation
- BCBS-CPMI-FSB-IOSCO Progress Report on the CCP Workplan
- CPMI-IOSCO Consultative Report on Resilience and Recovery of CCPs: Further Guidance on the PFMI
- FSB Discussion Note on Essential Aspects of CCP Resolution Planning
- FSB Proposed Policy Recommendations to Address Structural Vulnerabilities from Asset Management Activities
- FSB Progress Report to the G20 on the Action Plan to Assess and Address the Decline in Correspondent Banking
- FSB Report on FSB Members’ Plans to Address Legal Barriers to Reporting and Accessing OTC Derivatives Transaction Data
- IMF-FSB First Progress Report - Second Phase of the G20 Data Gaps Initiative (DGI-2)
- OECD Secretary-General’s Reports to G20 Finance Ministers (February, April and July 2016), and to G20 Leaders (September 2016)
- IMF-OECD-UN-WBG Joint Report on Enhancing the Effectiveness of External Support in Building Tax Capacity in Developing Countries
- G20 Voluntary Peer Review by China and the United States on Fossil Fuel Subsidies: US Self-review Report
- China’s Efforts to Phase Out and Rationalize Its Fossil-Fuel Subsidies – A Report on the G20 Peer-review of Inefficient Fossil-fuel Subsidies that Encourage Wasteful Consumption in China
- G20 Voluntary Peer Review by United States and China on Fossil Fuel Subsidies: China Self-review Report
- US’s Efforts to Phase Out and Rationalize Its Fossil-Fuel Subsidies – A Report on the G20 Peer-review of Inefficient Fossil-fuel Subsidies that Encourage Wasteful Consumption in US
- UNIDO report on Industrialization in Africa and Least Developed Countries: Boosting growth, creating jobs, promoting inclusiveness and sustainability
- ILO-OECD-WBG-IMF Report: Employment Trends and Challenges
- ILO-OECD-WBG Report: Generating Adequate Job Opportunities
- ILO-OECD-WBG Report: Enhancing Employability
- ILO-OECD-WBG-IMF Report: Promote Decent Work
- OECD-WBG-WTO Discussion Paper: Monitoring and Reducing Trade Costs
- WTO-UNCTAD-OECD-WBG Discussion Paper: Interrelationship between Trade and Investment: Strengthening Policy Coherence
- OECD-UNCTAD-WTO Discussion Paper on E-commerce
- WTO Report on Advancing the Multilateral Trading System: Issues for Further Consideration
- WTO Report on Regional Trade Agreements and the Multilateral Trading System: Further Analysis of Specific Provisions in RTAs
- WTO Trade Monitoring Report on G20 Trade Measures: Possible Improvements
- IMF-WBG Prospects for Global Trade
- WTO Report on Trade Finance & SMEs: Bridging the Gaps in Provision
- OECD-WBG-ITC Report: Towards a G20 Strategy for Promoting Inclusive Global Value Chains
Reports & Recommendations Received from Engagement Groups
- Towards an Innovative, Invigorated, Interconnected, and Inclusive World Economy--B20 2016 Policy Recommendations to the G20
- L20 Statement to the G20 Summit
- Y20 China 2016 Communique
- W20 Meeting Communique
- Communique of Civil Society 20 China 2016
- T20 Policy Recommendations to the G20
Acknowledgment and the way forward
We thank international organizations, including the UN, IMF, World Bank Group, WTO, ILO, OECD, FSB, FATF and BIS, for their valuable inputs and support to the G20 process. We welcome policy recommendations by the G20 engagement groups, namely Business 20, Labor 20, Women 20, Youth 20, Think 20, and Civil Society 20, and appreciate their important contributions this year.
We ask the OECD and World Bank to build a new online G20 Community of Practice within the existing Innovation Policy Platform, and ask the OECD to develop the 2016 G20 Innovation Report, to exchange knowledge and experiences.
We request the OECD, together with UNCTAD and UNIDO, to release a G20 New Industrial Revolution (NIR) Report, which provides an overview of opportunities and challenges brought about by NIR.
We welcome and encourage efforts made by the United Nations, UNCTAD, UNIDO, ILO, IMF, ITU, OECD,World Bank Group and other international organizations to develop better metrics for important policy issues like trust in the digital economy, e-commerce, cross-border data flows and the Internet of Things, as practical, relevant and appropriate.
We look forward to international organizations including the OECD and interested members, intensifying efforts to measure the digital economy in macroeconomic statistics through conducting a voluntary "good practices" survey of national statistical organizations, and organizing and hosting a workshop for statisticians and digital companies on source data to measure the digital economy.
We ask the Framework Working Group to conduct assessment of G20 structural reform progress in line with the Enhanced Structural Reform Agenda, and ask the OECD to help assess G20 progress and challenges within the structural reform priority areas by producing a technical report, with input from other international organizations, using the common set of indicators.
We invite the OECD and the IMF to continue the work on the composition of budget expenditures and revenues to support productivity, inclusiveness and growth.
In the context of sluggish trade and investment growth, we recognize the need to understand and better explain how trade and investment can contribute more to stimulate inclusive growth and jobs, and the links between structural measures, trade, investment and GDP. We ask the WTO, OECD, World Bank Group and other international organizations to advance their analytical work and debates on these matters, to contribute to improve people’s perceptions on the benefits of trade and investment on well-being. In this context, we also welcome further joint work by the WTO, UNCTAD, OECD, ITC, World Bank Group and IMF, in collaboration with other relevant international organizations, within their existing mandates and resources, to identify ways and means to promote inclusive, robust and sustainable trade and investment growth, including but not limited to the work of measuring trade costs, reporting on restrictive measures, improving economic trade modeling, communicating the benefits of trade and investment, investment promotion and facilitation, enhancing coherence and complementarity between trade and investment regimes, and promoting inclusive and coordinated global value chains.
We ask the finance ministers and central bank governors to report back on their further work on the international financial architecture by our next meeting.
We call on the FATF to reflect by March 2017 on ways to progress in strengthening its traction capacity and enhanced effectiveness of the network of FATF and FATF-style regional bodies.
We look forward to a report from the FSB on authorities' work to address misconduct in the financial sector.
We look forward to the BCBS comprehensive quantitative impact study that will inform the final design and calibration of the Basel III framework.
We look forward to considering the phase II report and recommendations of the FSB’s industry-led Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures in early 2017, which will present its recommendations for better climate related disclosures.
We welcome the IMF-FSB First Progress Report on the second phase of the Data Gaps Initiative and support the Report’s action plans.
We welcome the reports on the voluntary peer reviews of inefficient fossil fuel subsidies that have examined the policies of China and the United States, prepared by expert teams chaired by the OECD.
We ask the MDBs to move forward the directions and commitments outlined in the Joint Declaration of Aspirations on Actions to Support Infrastructure Investment. We ask the MDBs to further implement the G20 MDB Balance Sheet Optimization Action Plan.
We ask the World Bank to serve as the secretariat of the Global Infrastructure Connectivity Alliance, working closely with the Global Infrastructure Hub, OECD, other MDBs, and interested G20 Members to support its activities.
We thank the UNDP and the OECD for their support in the design of the G20 Action Plan on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and of the G20 Development Working Group (DWG) Comprehensive Accountability Report. We ask them to continue supporting the DWG for the monitoring of the implementation of the Action Plan and of the relevant accountability process.
We thank UNIDO and other international organizations for their support in the design of the G20 Initiative on Supporting Industrialization in Africa and LDCs. We look forward to address voluntary policy options to promote sustainable growth in Africa and the LDCs, including voluntary policy options to promote industrialization.
We acknowledge the establishment of the new Platform for Collaboration on Taxation by the IMF, OECD, UN, and World Bank Group, and their recommendations on mechanisms for effective technical assistance in support of tax reforms. We look forward to receiving a progress update by mid-2017.
We invite the ILO, OECD, World Bank Group and IMF to provide technical support in the implementation of the G20 Entrepreneurship Action Plan, to participate in the work of the Entrepreneurship Research Centre on G20 Economies and facilitate exchange of good practices and lessons learnt amongst G20 members. The ILO, OECD and other international organizations, social partners and experts are welcome to participate in the activities of the Centre and share their entrepreneurship experiences and research findings.
We invite the OECD and other international organizations to continue the development of the G20 initiated analytical framework for improving agricultural productivity including that of small-scale producers in an innovative and sustainable manner.
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