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In This Issue...Links to the News:
March 11, 2016
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IMF Backs New Package to Support World's Poorest During
Crisis
By Masahudu Ankiilu Kunateh, Ghanadot
Accra, Aug 3, Ghanadot - The IMF,
stepping up lending to low-income countries to combat the
impact of the global recession, has announced a new
framework for loans to the world’s poorest nations,
including increased resources, a doubling of borrowing
limits, zero interest rates until the end of 2011, and more
flexible terms.
The IMF’s Executive Board approved the package of measures
that will sharply increase the loan resources available to
low-income countries.
The resources—including from the planned sale of IMF
gold—are expected to boost the Fund’s concessional lending
to up to $17 billion through 2014, including up to $8
billion over the next two years.
In addition, the IMF announced zero interest payments up to
the end of 2011 for all concessional loans to low-income
members and lower interest rates on a permanent basis
thereafter. A new set of lending instruments will underpin
this increased support.
“This is an unprecedented scaling up of IMF support for the
poorest countries, in sub-Saharan Africa and all over the
world,” said IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn in
a statement accompanying the July 29 announcement.
The crisis originated in the advanced economies and has had
its most visible impact on the emerging market countries.
But a third wave of the crisis has threatened the remarkable
economic achievements many low-income countries have made
over the past decade.
Crisis hitting hard
An IMF report on the implications of the global financial
crisis for low-income countries had warned in March that the
global financial crisis has hit poor countries especially
hard, posing serious threats to their hard-won gains in
boosting economic growth and creating a need for additional
foreign financing to mitigate the impact of the crisis.
Also in March, Tanzania President Jakaya Kikwete,
Strauss-Kahn, and former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
convened a conference in Dar es Salaam of government,
business, civil society, and opinion leaders to address
these issues.
The IMF committed at the meeting to increase its support for
Africa with more financing, greater flexibility, enhanced
policy dialogue, and a further strengthening of Africa’s
voice in the Fund.
“We are responding with a historic set of actions in terms
of support for the world’s poor. The new resources and new
means of delivering them should help prevent millions of
people from falling into poverty,” Strauss-Kahn said.
Comprehensive support package
As part of the response, the IMF has already more than
doubled its financial assistance to low-income countries.
New IMF concessional lending commitments to low-income
countries through mid-July 2009 reached $2.9 billion
compared with $1.5 billion for the whole of 2008.
The new measures represent a significant additional effort
in the coming years. The IMF support package includes:
• Mobilization of additional resources, including from sales
of an agreed amount of IMF gold, to boost the Fund’s
concessional lending capacity to up to $17 billion through
2014, including up to $8 billion in the first two years.
This exceeds the call by the Group of Twenty for $6 billion
in new lending over two to three years.
• Interest relief, with zero payments on outstanding IMF
concessional loans through end-2011 to help low-income
countries cope with the crisis.
• Permanently higher concessionality of Fund financial
support—with annual interest rates regularly reviewed so as
to preserve a higher level of concessionality than
previously.
• Doubling of average loan access limits for low-income
countries
• A new set of financial instruments tailored to the diverse
needs of low-income countries and better suited to meet the
crisis challenges: An Extended Credit Facility (ECF) to
provide flexible medium-term support; A Standby Credit
Facility to address short-term and precautionary needs; and
A Rapid Credit Facility, offering emergency support with
limited conditionality
In addition, the IMF’s Executive Board recently backed the
Managing Director's proposal for a new general allocation of
$250 billion of Special Drawing Rights into the global
economy, of which more than $18 billion will help bolster
the foreign exchange reserves and relax the financing
constraints of low-income countries. If approved by the
IMF's Board of Governors, the proposed SDR allocation would
take place at the end of August.
Strauss-Kahn said that “All this represents a historic
effort by the Fund to help the world’s poor.” He added that
there would be greater emphasis in Fund-supported programs
on poverty reduction and growth objectives across all its
new lending instruments, including targets to safeguard
social and other priority spending.
The new lending windows are expected to become effective
later this year, when donor countries have given their final
consent. At that time, existing concessional arrangements
will automatically be converted into ECF arrangements.
Existing arrangements under the Exogenous Shocks Facility,
however, will remain in effect, and new ones that have
already been prepared could still be approved during a
three-month window.
More flexible conditionality
The IMF already announced this year a more flexible approach
to conditionality in the programs it supports: structural
reform conditions have been streamlined for all
Fund-supported programs, and additional flexibility has been
introduced for structural conditionality in medium-term,
low-income country programs. IMF-supported programs have
also accommodated larger fiscal deficits during the crisis
in most low-income countries.
“Since the crisis hit, we have been listening and responding
to our member countries,” said Strauss-Kahn. “The scaling up
in the IMF’s support not only will help these low-income
countries weather a crisis that is not of their making. Once
the crisis has passed, it will also pave the way for a
progress in the battle against poverty.”
Increased IMF financial assistance has been coupled with
programs that include higher levels of pro-poor spending in
a majority of low-income countries. Fund programs have
accommodated increased fiscal deficits, and often higher
spending, to meet the challenges of the food and fuel and
global financial crises. Recent programs have also often
contained looser monetary policy and higher inflation
targets.
Role of gold sales
Some of the money to boost IMF lending to low-income
countries will come from the envisaged sales of IMF gold.
The IMF Executive Board will consider a plan for the Fund to
sell about 400 metric tons of gold in order to create a new
income model for the institution. In order to meet the
financing needs of the low-income countries during the
global crisis, some of the proceeds of those sales will be
used to help provide new subsidy resources for the
concessional lending to those countries.
Resources linked to the gold sales will be used to help fund
concessional lending to low-income countries in the
following ways. First, windfall profits when the gold sales
take place can be used for the subsidy resources. Windfall
profits would derive from gold sales at an average price in
excess of $850 per ounce—that is the price assumed in the
new income model as necessary to fund the model. Second, to
the extent that the realized windfall profits fall short of
the required contribution, the remaining amount will be
generated through investment income from the endowment
funded by the gold sales.
Ghanadot
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IMF Backs New Package to Support
World's Poorest During Crisis
Accra, Aug 3, Ghanadot - The IMF, stepping up
lending to low-income countries to combat the impact of
the global recession, has announced a new framework for
loans to the world’s poorest nations...
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