Wednesday, May 5, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Kissinger warns emerging nations RIY bI1Y ~lM Y/Yl NAIROBI, Kenya W) - Secre- tary of State Henry Kissinger cautioned Third World nations yesterday against using 'bloc economic power" to narrow the economic gap between rich and poor countries. But he pledged Ambrican cooperation in their development efforts. "The Third World has to choose between slogans and solutions, between rhetoric and reality," Kissinger told some two dozen cabinet ministers gathered here for the opening today of the month-long U.N. Conference on Trade and De- velopment (UNCTAD). AT THE SAME time, UNCTAD Secretary-General Gamani Corea said poor countries must help themselves become richer and outlined a four-point program to reduce poor-country dependence on trade and aid from industrial powers. Corea's proposals include less use of dollars and other hard currencies in trade, new invest- ment arrangements bypassing Western-dominated institutions, tariff concessions among poor countries for each other's pro- ducts and steps to increase food production. At the conference, the U.S. will propose creation of a multi- billion-dollar international s e- sources bank designed to attract new private investments to de- veloling countries. HOWEVER, the Ford -dmin- istration a p p e a r a dead-set against "indexing" - a system of correlating prices of ail, cof- fee, sugar and other commodi- ties to what the Third World countries most pay for indusrial imnorts. Kissinger said the proposals he will make in his speech to- morrow "go as far as it is pos- sible for us to go." But, in a conciliatory gesture, he said the U.S. is prepared to modify them in the weeks ahead. "We will do our best to listen to vo'r concerns," he told the ministers at yesterday's lunch- eon. COREA, in his 8-page report, said the world's poor majority could never gain economic equality with the rich, industrial minority unless developing na- tions learned to help themselves. He said it was also in the self- interest of developed nations to close the global income gap. Corea is from Sri Lanka, form- erly Ceylon. "'The developed countries can be harmed by crisis conditions in the Third World," he said. "It is inconceivable that the de- veloped countries can continue a smooth and even growth and rising prosperity within a global framework in which the vest mass of human population . . . continues to remain in a state of unrest." The report listed five key topics for the meeting, which some observers believe could mark a turning point in efforts to solve the -world's greatest peacetime crisis of inflation, unemployment and monetary in- stability in half a century. THE TOPICS are how to smooth out price swings in raw materials providing most of the Third World's export income, how to ease poor-country debt burdens, how to spread Western technology in underdeveloped areas, how to regulate multi- national companies that domi- nate world trade and how to in- crease economic cooperation among poor nations. Some observers say failure to re ch areement between rich and poor nations on at least some of the issues could bring to a close a two-year period of relatively amicable negotiations following a U.N. General As- sembly call for a new world economic order. Arab nations were reported prirrotely seeking support for excldi-g Israel from the meet- nnd for admitting the Pales- tine Liberation Organization as an observer. There were also on- offi-ial suarsestions that South Africa shomld be excluded. 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