By Our Reporter Five parties of the incumbent coalition government have unveiled their Minimum Policy Priority and Common Resolution. Amid a programme organised at the Prime Minister's Office on Tuesday afternoon, the Common Resolution was unveiled by UML vice chairman Bishnu Paudel with a commitment to dispelling discontent and instilling confidence, primarily focusing on 13 areas. A task force was formed to prepare the Minimum Policy Priority and Common Resolution after the change in the power equation of the executive on March 12. Based on the consensus of the seven-point agreement reached among the five parties, the task force prepared the 'Minimum Policy Priority and Common Resolution.' In their common programme, the five parties have committed to instilling hope and confidence in the public by controlling aberrations seen in governing, which were against the spirit of the constitution. In order to remove the slump seen in the economy from production to consumption and from investment to trade, the CMP has focused on speeding up the economy by making policy interventions. Resolving problems such as slow credit disbursement and low capital expenditure, the document has called for coordinating fiscal and monetary policy, revising various laws that hinder short-term and medium-term investment and employment-friendly policy reforms. To reduce the growing gap between revenue and expenditure, the rulung parties have proposed revenue sector reform, frugality in government operation, and identification and mobilisation of new sources of foreign aid. The five parties have expressed their commitment to achieve sustainable development goals by the year 2030 and build a 'respectable middle-income economy' by specifying digitisation, tourism, agriculture, energy and green industrialisation as new bases for employment-oriented economic growth and structural transformation. The propositions include solving the problems related to cooperatives, microfinance institutions and unfair transactions and arranging for the rescheduling and restructuring of loans of microfinance borrowers by gradually implementing the suggestions of the commissions formed at different times to solve the problems arising in financial institutions. The five parties have committed to solving the issues seen in the implementation of federalism. They have prioritised employment, entrepreneurship and domestic production. The parties also committed to enhancing physical infrastructure development and inter-agency coordination, developing energy and information and communication policy systems.