September 14, 2022
Spectrum News 1 Discusses Jubilee USA's New York bill to fight developing countries' debt crises and address supply shocks. Below is a brief excerpt. Click here for the full article.
NY lawmakers, advocates want pressure for developing nations' creditors
By Nick Reisman
For the Rev. Nicolle Jean-Simone, helping her husband's native Haiti often comes from personal pleas.
"We receive calls from family members, friends, missionaries telling us the needs of what's going on in the country and we do our very best to support them," she said. "But what if we could do it also through legislation."
Jean-Simone was among the advocates on Wednesday at the state Capitol calling for a measure that would require the New York-based creditors of developing nations facing a mountain of debt to help with relief and restructuring efforts.
The goal is to make it easier for those countries to pay the debt back and in turn help the residents of those countries who have struggled with ongoing crises.
Read more here.
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September 14, 2022
CBS Albany Discusses Jubilee USA's New York debt bill to tackle developing countries' debt crises and address supply shocks. Read an excerpt below and click here for the full story.
Assemblymember Fahy introduces NY taxpayer and international debt crises protection act
By WRGB Staff
Albany, NY (WRGB) — Assemblymember Fahy is introducing the New York taxpayer and international debt crises protection act
It requires private creditors to join debt relief initiatives for developing nations, which are struggling with debt crises, the pandemic and economic shock from the war in Ukraine.
The bill prevents tax money that funds u-s contributions to debt relief initiatives from being used to bail out private creditors and enables countries that are in debt to support spending on health, education and other services for their most vulnerable.
See the article here.
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September 01, 2022
Eric speaks with WORT 89.9 a Madison, WI public radio on student debt cancellation. Hear the full interview here.
LeCompte: How Student Debt Cancellation Affects Communities
AUGUST 31, 2022 BY 8 O'CLOCK BUZZ
The Jubilee USA Network works on the debt, tax, transparency and trade policies that impact our lives, communities and world. Jubilee’s Executive Director, Eric LeCompte, talks with Jan Miyasaki about the broad community-wide effects of Biden’s student debt cancellation.
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August 31, 2022
WORT 89.9 FM features Eric LeCompte on a brief podcast detailing the effects Biden's student debt cancellation plan has on various communities.
Lecompte: How Student Debt Cancellation Affects Communities
Click here for the full audio transcript (accessible through SoundCloud).
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August 25, 2022
Inflation, Recession and Developing Country Debt Top Agenda of Jackson Hole Meeting
The future of interest rates and the threat of stagflation – a phenomenon where the economy and jobs shrink while inflation rises -- dominate the agenda at a three-day global central bank retreat starting on Thursday. This year’s traditional Jackson Hole, Wyoming symposium gathers the US Federal Reserve and other world central banks under the theme "Reassessing Constraints on the Economy and Policy."
“The meeting is focused on trying to tame inflation without causing more harm for developing countries in crisis,” said Eric LeCompte, Executive Director of the development group Jubilee USA Network. “We are reminded by the challenging decisions world leaders faced with the economy in the 1970s. At this point with greater threats to the global economy, we are in uncharted waters."
The US Federal Reserve raised interest rates more than two percentage points since the beginning of the year and consumer prices rose the fastest in four decades. The combination of interest rate increases and a strong dollar raises debt levels in developing countries. In July the IMF reported that debt in 60 percent of the poorest countries and 30 percent of emerging middle-income economies reached critically-high levels.
“While lowering inflation is important, we need to keep in mind the global impacts of increased debt, food crises and supply shocks that can undermine the economic stability we hoped to achieve through lower inflation,” shared LeCompte.
On Friday, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell addresses the Jackson Hole meeting.
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August 13, 2022
Crux features Jubilee USA Network and Eric LeCompte on the topic of Puerto Rico's increasingly severe economic challenges in light of efforts in creating debt restructuring plans. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full article.
Puerto Rico ‘at a crossroads’ as economic crisis takes toll
By John Lavenburg
“We’re at a crossroads,” Eric LeCompte, executive director of Jubilee USA Network told Crux.
“If Puerto Rico receives more economic shocks – natural disasters, the COVID-19 pandemic – without more aid or resources, it’s really going to get much worse,” LeCompte said. “On the other hand, if Puerto Rico gets the resources it needs to deal with disaster relief, child poverty, climate, to be able to support new jobs; if these things move forward not only will it help make Puerto Rico’s debt sustainable, but it will ensure there’s positive economic growth.”
Jubilee USA Network is a faith-based organization that promotes debt relief around the world. Since 2014 it has monitored Puerto Rico’s financial and debt crisis, growing child poverty rates and policy implementation and has advocated alongside Puerto Rico’s religious leaders.
Read here for more.
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August 10, 2022
Presbyterian Mission features an article by Aldo Caliari detailing the need for a more robust response to the debt crisis borne from the COVID-19 pandemic and Ukraine invasion, particularly from the G-20. Read a brief excerpt below, and click here for the full article.
The International Community Must Respond to the Debt Crisis
By Aldo Caliari
Paying debt service also comes at the expense of infrastructure investments critical for recovering and building resilience to climate and other shocks. Under-investment eventually takes its toll. Many weaknesses in developing countries’ response to the pandemic can be traced back to years of skimping on health and jobs infrastructure. Jubilee USA and LATINDADD’s Atlas of Vulnerability found that in all but two of the developing countries for which it has data, health spending per person is less than a quarter the average in industrialized countries. Africa, with the highest share of population affected by food crises – at 346 million – and dependent on Ukraine and Russia for a high share of food imports, is also the region most vulnerable to climate change. Lack of climate change preparedness, amidst rising floods, water scarcity and other weather-driven events, dramatically lower agricultural output and add to COVID- and war-induced food access barriers.
Read here for more.
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July 27, 2022
The New York Times published an article detailing the struggle of Barbados as it faces the challenges of paying its debt to the financial institutions and being further hampered by climate change disasters, with significance to Prime Minister Mia Mottley's work on the matter. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full story.
The Barbados Rebellion
By Abrahm Lustgarten
With Lagarde on the phone, Mottley made her pitch. Barbados, she said, was going to default on the debt it owed to private banks and investors. She wanted Lagarde’s support in persuading them to renegotiate its terms. The I.M.F. is both the assessor and the enforcer of global economic policy, the de facto gatekeeper to the world’s capital markets. Mottley knew that banks and investors would work with her only if Barbados were participating in a formal I.M.F. program for economic reform — and it had to start immediately.
Mottley told Lagarde that Barbados was prepared to do voluntarily what most countries have to be coerced to do: cut its budget and raise taxes. But she needed something in return. With the effects of climate change bearing down on the region, the kind of austerity the I.M.F. demanded from developing nations — slashing the size of government agencies and firing thousands of public employees while auctioning off real estate and other national assets — would no longer work. Mottley wanted Lagarde to endorse an economic program that would still allow her to raise salaries of civil servants, build schools and improve piping and wiring for water and power. “Before you carry people on a long journey,” she told Lagarde, “you have to give them a little breakfast.”
Read here for more.
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July 16, 2022
Barron's quotes Eric LeCompte in an article detailing the divisions within the G-20 in inviting Russian representatives to meetings in light of the Ukraine invasion and the financial crises borne from it. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full article.
G20 Finance Talks Overshadowed By Ukraine End Without Joint Communique
By Marchio Gorbiano
Observers said the failure to agree on a joint communique would hinder coordinated efforts to solve rising inflation and food shortages.
"The lack of a G20 finance ministers' communique means it will be more difficult for the G20 to forge a consensus on vital issues in the fall," said Eric LeCompte, executive director of Jubilee USA Network, an NGO that lobbies for developing nation debt relief.
"Internal divisions hinder the G20's ability to act decisively and leaves the world in uncharted waters."
Read here for more.
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July 16, 2022
The G20 finance ministers concluded their meetings in Bali, Indonesia. The ministers focused on the global economy impacted by the pandemic, Ukraine war, high country debt levels and rising inflation.
Eric LeCompte, Executive Director of the religious development group Jubilee USA Network and a United Nations finance expert who tracked or participated in G20 meetings since 2010, releases the following statement on the G20 finance ministers meeting:
“The lack of a G20 finance ministers communiqué means it will be more difficult for the G20 to forge a consensus on vital issues in the fall.
"Tensions over Russia's war in Ukraine translated to the G20 failing to take more action on inflation, food shortages and pandemic response.
“Internal divisions hinder the G20’s ability to act decisively and leaves the world in uncharted waters.
“Countries lack the resources to deal with food shortages and we are concerned that the food shortages can lead to unrest.
“As more countries risk defaulting on their loans, we face more threats for stability of the global economy.
“We are waiting for the G20's debt reduction framework to be running so developing countries can receive relief to address food shortages and respond to the pandemic.
“A critical part of the G20 meetings was reviewing proposals that can increase development bank lending by hundreds of billions.
“Getting more resources to development banks would be a significant step to prevent future pandemics and food crises."
Read Jubilee USA's press release about the meetings here.
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July 15, 2022
On Friday, G20 finance ministers descend on Bali, Indonesia, to discuss a global economy impacted by the pandemic, Ukraine war, high country debt levels and rising inflation. Food shortages, climate and tax issues will also be on the agenda at the two-day talks.
“Developing countries lack the resources to confront economic crises and food shortages,” said Eric LeCompte, Executive Director of the religious development group Jubilee USA Network. “The G20 must act quickly to prevent a recession and address food and debt crises."
The World Bank warns that due to the impacts of the pandemic and the Ukraine war, average incomes in 40% of developing countries will remain below 2019 levels.
"Rising interest rates mean developing countries have higher debt payments just when they need to invest more to protect their people,” added LeCompte. “Countries need debt relief, not more debt."
Three countries applied to a G20 debt reduction process created in 2020 and have yet to see any debt relief.
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