Sevilla, Spain – 2 July 2025 – Antigua and Barbuda took center stage on the third day of the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development (FFD4), as Prime Minister the Honourable Gaston Browne delivered impassioned and visionary statements that positioned Small Island Developing States (SIDS) at the forefront of the global development agenda.
In a packed side event titled “Financing Development in a Climate-Challenged World: Debt Sustainability Support Service (DSSS),” Prime Minister Browne delivered the keynote address, heralding a transformative moment for global financing frameworks. Declaring that the world stood “at a turning point,” he underscored the urgency of tackling the interlinked challenges of debt, climate vulnerability, and sustainable development—challenges acutely felt by SIDS.
“The inclusion of the DSSS in the Compromiso de Sevilla, the final outcome document of FfD4, reflects the growing recognition that these converging crises demand innovative and inclusive solutions,” he said.
Highlighting the disproportionate burdens borne by SIDS, he stated, “We did not create this crisis. But we are stepping forward to offer solutions.” He described the DSSS as a country-led, SIDS-driven initiative—originating from the Antigua and Barbuda Agenda for SIDS (ABAS)—designed to place the voices and needs of the most vulnerable at the center of reform.
Later in the day, Prime Minister Browne was the sole Head of Government invited to deliver a Special Address at Multi-Stakeholder Round Table 5: Realizing a Development-Oriented Sovereign Debt Architecture. The high-level session, co-chaired by H.E. Pedro Sánchez, President of the Government of Spain, and H.E. Bassirou Diomaye Faye, President of Senegal, also featured Nobel Laureate Professor Joseph Stiglitz and other global financial leaders.
Addressing the gathering, Prime Minister Browne noted:
“For too long, our small island states have battled existential threats—climate shocks, pandemic aftershocks, and deep economic vulnerabilities—now compounded by unsustainable debt burdens. Our development and survival hang in the balance.”
He reiterated the centrality of ABAS as a strategic and action-oriented framework:
“ABAS is bold, comprehensive, and indispensable. It is more than a roadmap—it is a lifeline.”
Among the distinguished participants were Finance Ministers from Cameroon, Tunisia, and Ethiopia, along with senior representatives from the World Bank Group—underscoring growing consensus on the need to overhaul the global financial architecture.
As the conference progresses, Prime Minister Browne’s leadership remains a source of inspiration and resolve. He left the international community with a powerful charge:
“Financing for development must be measured not by pledges, but by progress. Now is the time to build a just and inclusive system—one that allows every nation, no matter its size or circumstance, to thrive. Antigua and Barbuda will persist until that vision is fully realized.”