Just as G7 hosts, Germany, and its European counterparts benefited from Marshall Plan investment after the second world war, the richest countries must now support global recovery by investing in four key areas.
When President of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa and the Chairperson of the African Union , president of Senegal, Macky Sall, attend the G7 Summit in Germany this weekend, there is one thing that they must make clear to president Biden, Chancellor Scholz,, in relation to the one topic that will no doubt dominate all others during the talks. It is that whilst we empathise greatly with the victims of Russia’s bloody, this also has serious global implications.
Over 100 countries are now at greater risk due to food, energy and financial instability, and these risks will only increase as a global recession looms.
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