In recent years, global leaders from diverse political, geographical, and economic backgrounds have been uniting around a common recognition: the global economic system as currently structured—dominated by debt-driven fiat currencies—is unsustainable. This convergence of perspectives has crystallized into explicit calls for a fundamental economic reset. These calls directly support the innovative principles embodied by the Proposed Treaty of Nairobi and the Credit-to-Credit (C2C) Monetary System.
An Era of Economic Realignment
The current global financial architecture, originating from the collapse of the Bretton Woods system in 1971, has been characterized by cycles of debt accumulation, currency volatility, inflationary pressures, and economic inequality. As these systemic flaws have become increasingly apparent, leading economists, policy makers, and heads of government have openly advocated for radical transformation.
Voices from Around the World
- Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley (Barbados), in her impactful speech at the 79th UN General Assembly on September 27, 2024, underscored the urgency for a global economic reset, stressing that “the world needs a reset to ensure economic justice, financial stability, and sustainability.”
- President Emmanuel Macron (France), convening global leaders for the “New Global Financing Pact” in June 2023, called for a transformative approach to international finance. Macron explicitly emphasized the need for a financial architecture that reduces dependence on unsustainable debt and restores genuine value and stability to global monetary systems.
- President Nana Akufo-Addo (Ghana), during Ghana’s National Economic Dialogue in 2023, openly advocated for reforms to the global financial system, highlighting the damaging impact of debt reliance and fiat currency instability on developing economies.
- President Cyril Ramaphosa (South Africa), at multiple international forums including BRICS summits, has consistently pointed out the need for new monetary frameworks that empower nations with economic sovereignty and reduce reliance on debt-driven external financing.
- President William Ruto (Kenya), addressing national and international economic policy forums, has urged for innovative monetary reforms that stabilize currencies and reduce inflationary pressures that disproportionately affect vulnerable populations.
- President Salva Kiir Mayardit (South Sudan), in his ongoing search for lasting economic solutions, has emphasized the necessity for his nation—and indeed all nations—to transition to more stable, equitable, and credit-backed monetary frameworks to achieve lasting economic peace and stability.
- Former President Donald Trump (USA), has voiced concerns about America’s unsustainable debt trajectory, recognizing publicly that the current system of debt-financed growth has serious limitations and risks for national economic security.
Global Economic Forums and Institutions
Institutions that shape international economic policy have also amplified these calls:
- World Economic Forum (WEF), through its Great Reset Initiative, advocates for fundamental shifts toward economic systems characterized by transparency, sustainability, and equitable distribution of wealth, mirroring principles central to the Treaty of Nairobi.
- Former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, advocating for coordinated global economic policies, emphasized the fragility and systemic risks inherent in the current debt-based international financial system.
- World Trade Organization (WTO) Leaders, both past and present, have stressed the urgent need for systemic financial reforms to ensure that global trade remains equitable, stable, and beneficial to all nations, not just the powerful few.
Aligning with the Treaty of Nairobi and the C2C Monetary System
The Proposed Treaty of Nairobi provides a clear, actionable framework to meet the global demand for economic reset:
- Debt Elimination: Nations adopting the C2C Monetary System under the Treaty of Nairobi have their sovereign debts cleared through Central Ura, ensuring immediate fiscal stability and ending cycles of dependency.
- Credit-Backed Currency Issuance: By transitioning from debt-based fiat currencies to credit-backed money, nations achieve genuine monetary sovereignty, economic stability, and protection against inflation and devaluation.
- Global Ura Authority (GUA): This proposed international oversight body ensures transparent management and accountable issuance of currency, comparable to a modernized Bretton Woods system—without its historical vulnerabilities. The GUA fosters genuine international economic cooperation and prevents currency manipulation.
- Economic Justice and Stability: The principles behind the Treaty of Nairobi explicitly focus on financial inclusion, equitable economic growth, and global financial integrity, aligning closely with the global calls highlighted by leaders.
Why This Matters Now
The convergence of global opinion towards economic reset signals an unprecedented historical moment. Leaders across continents—from Africa, Europe, Asia, and the Americas—have recognized the necessity of moving away from debt-driven instability toward systems rooted in real economic value, transparency, and equity. The Proposed Treaty of Nairobi provides a coherent, practical, and implementable response to these widespread calls for economic justice and monetary stability.
Conclusion: A Moment of Opportunity
The widespread global calls for a monetary and economic reset reflect not a fleeting moment, but a historic turning point. The Proposed Treaty of Nairobi and the establishment of the Global Ura Authority are timely and pragmatic solutions to address the systemic vulnerabilities that leaders around the world have collectively identified.
Joining as a Founding Holder in this monumental transformation means directly supporting an initiative recognized and reinforced by global economic and political consensus. It means actively participating in the creation of a stable, sustainable, and equitable economic future—one free from the limitations and risks inherent in the current fiat system.
Now is the time to act. Now is the time to be a part of history.