Gap between rich and poor nations is growing even wider, UN report says
[April 11, 2026] By
EDITH M. LEDERER
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The gap between rich and poor nations is growing
even wider as actions agreed to by many countries last year, including
overhauling the major global financial institutions, remain unfulfilled
promises, a U.N. report concludes.
The report assessing the blueprint adopted in Seville, Spain, last June
to narrow the gap and achieve U.N. development goals for 2030 was issued
ahead of next week’s spring meetings in Washington of the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank, the main global financial institutions
promoting economic growth.
The managing director of the IMF, Kristalina Georgieva, said it had been
prepared to upgrade global growth, but the Iran war has now darkened the
outlook for the world economy.

Li Junhua, the U.N. undersecretary-general for economic and social
affairs, said the geopolitical tensions were compounding the struggles
of developing countries to attract financing. “This is an extremely
perilous time for international cooperation, as geopolitical
considerations are increasingly shaping economic relations and financial
policies,” he said.
The report pointed to rising trade barriers and repeated climate-related
shocks as also adding to the growing gap.
At last year’s conference in Seville, the leaders of many of the world's
nations, but not the United States, unanimously adopted the Seville
Commitment, which was aimed at closing the $4 trillion annual financing
gap for development. It called for scaling up investments in developing
countries and reforming the international financial architecture,
including the World Bank and IMF.
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 U.N. Secretary-General António
Guterres has repeatedly called for major changes to the two
institutions, saying the IMF has benefited rich countries instead of
poor ones, and the World Bank has failed in its mission, especially
during the COVID-19 pandemic, which left dozens of countries deeply
indebted. His criticisms echo those of outside critics who cite
frustration in developing countries with the U.S. and its European
allies dominating decision-making at financial institutions.
The U.N. report on implementing the Seville Commitment said it
represents “the best hope” to close the widening financial gap.
But in 2025, Li said 25 countries decreased their development
assistance to poorer countries, leading to a 23% overall drop from
2024, the largest annual contraction on record. The biggest decline
— 59% — was from the United States, he said.
Based on preliminary data, Li said, a further decline of 5.8% is
expected in 2026.
The report said tariffs — including those imposed by the Trump
administration — have had a major impact on developing countries.
Average tariffs on exports from the world’s poorest nations surged
from 9% to 28% in 2025, the report said, and for developing
countries, excluding China, average tariffs increased from 2% to
19%.
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