CARIBBEAN-Richer countries must step up support for the poorest.

0
767

WASHINGTON, CMC -The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said when finance ministers and central bankers, including those from the Caribbean, arrive in Washington next week for the annual IMF-World Bank Spring meetings, they will have much to discuss, from the global economy’s fragile recovery to the risk of financial instability.

In addition, the Washington-based financial institution said that it is imperative, however, that they don’t forget the increasing needs of the world’s poorest nations, noting that the IMF’s tried-and-tested instrument to assist these countries, namely, the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT), is in urgent need of replenishment.

The IMF said since the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. It has supported more than 50 low-income countries with some US$24 billion in interest-free loans via the PRGT, thus helping to stave off instability in a wide range of the world’s poorest nations.

It said now the PRGT must be adequately funded and subsidized so that this vital source of interest-free financing can continue, adding it is a matter of utmost priority.

“The challenges facing low-income countries have grown immensely in recent years. They have suffered from the pandemic and a succession of economic shocks. And today, they face additional challenges from scarcer financing, high inflation, persistent food insecurity, rising debt vulnerabilities, and sociopolitical tensions, especially in fragile and conflicted affected areas.

“We have revised our growth projections for low-income countries, whose per capita income growth is falling further behind the rates needed to catch up with advanced economies. This threatens to reverse a decades-long trend of steadily converging living standards,” the IMF said, noting that without urgent action and more support, there is little chance of them making up the lost ground.

“We estimate low-income countries’ additional financing needs—to accelerate growth and put them back on a path to income convergence with advanced economies—to be about US$440 billion over the five years through 2026.”

The Washington-based financial institution said domestic reforms to boost growth, strengthen public finances and raise domestic revenue should help address this financing need.

“But, as we will spotlight during a special Spring Meetings session of donors and recipients on concessional financing on April 12, more international support is also needed—especially as official development assistance continues to fall short of the United Nations’ target of 0.7 percent of gross national income.”

The IMF said more prosperous nations could assist poorer ones by pooling their resources and funding the work of the IMF, World Bank, and other multilateral agencies and through their bilateral development programs.

It said the PRGT is integral to this effort. It provides interest-free loans to support well-designed economic programs that help catalyze additional financing from donors, development institutions, and the private sector.

The IMF said a failure to secure the PRGT resources would jeopardize the IMF’s ability to provide much-needed support to low-income countries as they seek to stabilize their economies in an increasingly shock-prone world.

“When the finance ministers and central bank governors of our 190 member countries arrive in Washington next week, there will be plenty to discuss. But these leaders must not allow other challenges to crowd out the pressing needs of the world’s poorest nations.

Supporting the PRGT is an excellent way to keep this issue at the top of the global agenda,” the IMF added.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here