BARCELONA, Spain — Many of the world's nations, but not the United States, gathered Monday in Spain to tackle the growing gap between rich and poor nations and try to drum up trillions of dollars needed to close it.
''Financing is the engine of development. And right now, this engine is sputtering,'' United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in his opening comments at the four-day Financing for Development meeting in Seville.
Many countries face escalating debt burdens, declining investments, decreasing international aid and increasing trade barriers.
Co-hosts the U.N. and Spain believe the meeting is an opportunity to close the staggering $4 trillion annual financing gap to promote development, bring millions of people out of poverty and help achieve the U.N.'s badly lagging Sustainable Development Goals for 2030.
Even though the gathering comes amid global economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions, there is hope that the world can address one of the most important global challenges: ensuring all people have access to food, health care, education and water.
More than 70 world leaders are attending, the U.N. said, along with representatives of international financial institutions, development banks, philanthropic organizations, the private sector and civil society.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told the delegates that the summit is an opportunity "for us to raise our voice in the face of those who seek to convince us that rivalry and competition will set the tone for humanity and for its future."
A last-minute US rejection