 I welcome immediately the Secretary-General, his Excellency, Antonio Gutierrez. Thank you very much to give us your opening remarks. Thank you very much, and I'm going to apologize, because I will speak, listen a little bit of time, and immediately have to go, because today I have about 40 bilaterals, and this is my sixth intervention. So it's a little bit complicated, and I will be extremely unpolite, but I have no alternative. Your Majesties, Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, thank you for being here today to focus on the role of financial inclusion in sustainable development. But I want to particularly thank Her Majesty, Queen Máxima, my special advocate, for raising the profile of this issue around the world in a way that has been absolutely remarkable. I believe that these 10 years have indeed made an enormous difference. I believe that when you started, we heard in the kind of proto-history of financial inclusion, and today we are really in a very dynamic movement everywhere. So on behalf of the United Nations as a whole, I wanted to thank you very much and to say how pride I am that you have accepted to go on remaining as my special advocate. And I thank the group of friends for financial inclusion, for their work, and for co-hosting today's event. Achieving the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development depends on adequate financing, based on the global partnership agreed in the Addis Ababa Action Agenda. This relies, in turn, on taking full advantage of the FinTech revolution. New financial technologies, institutions, and markets have great potential to extend financial inclusion and to facilitate investment. Since 2011, the proportion of people with access to formal financial services has risen from 50 percent to nearly 70 percent. Some 1.2 billion additional people now have access to savings accounts, credit, payment plans, and insurance products. These services can help people and communities to build resilience and to make the most of opportunities. New financial technologies have also reduced operational costs, enabling governments to reach people with financial services more easily. They can facilitate investment and help small businesses to access credit. And they can help to fight the tax evasion, money laundering, and illicit financial flows that can drain resources from the developing world. However, despite these enormous progress, some 1.7 billion adults still do not have an account with a financial institution or a mobile money provider. And more than half are women. Gender equality is a proven driver for ending poverty and building sustainable communities and economies. And so it's particularly negative that more than half of those that are deprived of these instruments are women. The strategy for financing the 2030 agenda that was launched last year sets out ways in which the United Nations can support a fundamental shift to align global economic policies and financial systems with the 2030 agenda. Seizing the potential of financial innovations, new technologies, and digitalization to provide equitable access to finance is one of its three key objectives. Beyond the United Nations, I am pleased that the G20, the Gates Foundation, and others are prioritizing financial inclusion, and more than 50 countries have now developed their own national financial inclusion strategies. Lack of a legal identity is a major bar to financial inclusion for 1.1 billion people. Many solutions must include efforts to tackle these. Excellencies, majesties, ladies and gentlemen, new technologies can create new risks, disrupt labor markets, and contribute to growing inequality. Financial systems and regulatory frameworks must manage these risks without creating new obstacles to achieving the 2030 agenda. The task force on digital financing of the sustainable development goals is addressing these challenges. This forthcoming report finds that digitalization is already helping to mobilize funds more quickly and direct them towards sustainable development. And I hope these initiatives will continue to complement and support each other to harness the fintech revolution for sustainable development and promote lives of peace, dignity, and prosperity for all. And Your Majesty, I know that with your leadership, with your enthusiasm, and with your mobilization capacity, this is going to move even more quickly in the next 10 years.