Jubilee USA Statement on IMF and World Bank Development Committee Communiqué

Washington DC - The Development Committee, a ministerial-level consensus building and policymaking body for the World Bank and the IMF, met as part of the Annual IMF and World Bank Meetings. 

Eric LeCompte the Executive Director of the religious development organization Jubilee USA, releases the following statement on the World Bank Development Committee Communiqué:

“The cocktail of high debts, shrinking economies and rising spending pressures requires much bolder action than just extending the debt payment suspension.

"The Development Committee again is encouraging that debt relief possibilities be reviewed for middle-income developing countries too, not just low-income countries.

"Some of the most significant increases in poverty and job loss are in middle-income developing countries and so far these countries are left out of debt relief processes.

"The ministers are highlighting their concern that the private sector is not participating in debt relief for countries facing coronavirus health and economic crises.

“The Bank leadership is concerned that its exceptional assistance may be going to repay creditors that refuse to forgive debts.

“The World Bank President has put on the table some bold ideas for a debt restructuring process that restores balance between creditors and debtors.

"Global poverty is growing for the first time in two decades. World Bank assessments show that 150 million people will fall into extreme poverty by 2021.

"The World Bank disbursed a record $45 billion in the first 3 months of the pandemic and committed to disburse $115 more by mid-2021, but a lot of this assistance is in the form of loans to countries already in debt.

“The Bank is front-loading aid resources to the poorest countries to respond to the pandemic. The Bank will need a new infusion of resources to keep up this crisis.

“The IMF should access new global reserve funds or the Special Drawing Rights. These resources could support increased Bank lending and debt relief capacity."

Read the World Bank Development Committee Communiqué here

Read Jubilee USA's statement on the World Bank and IMF Annual Meetings and communiqué here.

Read Jubilee USA's press release on the G20 Finance Ministers Meeting here.

Read Jubilee USA's press release on the IMF's World Economic Outlook and Global Financial Stability reports here.

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Eric LeCompte Quoted in Devex on the G20 Negotiations

Devex features Eric LeCompte's comments on the recent G20 negotiations and debt relief plan. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full story.

'Intense' G20 negotiations fall short on debt support expectations

The G-20 extended its debt suspension initiative but otherwise fell short of what low-income countries, advocates, and World Bank President David Malpass had hoped it would do to help countries facing debt challenges in the wake of COVID-19.

The G-20 communique was the result of “intense” negotiations, Eric LeCompte, executive director of Jubilee USA Network, told Devex.

The inability to come to an agreement on the debt reduction framework came down generally to tensions around how extensive a restructuring process should be and whether it would include other low- and middle-income countries beyond those eligible for DSSI. China, India, and Turkey had concerns about agreeing to a process without a resolution to questions about who it impacts, LeCompte said. Some countries, specifically China, may need to change their laws to participate in a debt reduction process, he added.

“I think this is the most important thing that the G-20 is dealing with right now, how to move forward a debt reduction framework, who is included, how to handle the private sector,” he said.

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AP and Hundreds of Outlets Feature Eric LeCompte on the Global Economy's Warning Signs

The IMF reported that the effects of the Coronavirus crisis threatens to leave long-lasting scars on the global economy. The Associated Press has featured Eric LeCompte's thoughts on the gravity of the situation and how this will affect developing nations. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full story. 

IMF warns global economy could be permanently scarred

The fall meetings of the IMF and its sister lending organization, the World Bank, were held virtually against a grim backdrop of the damage the pandemic has inflicted on the world. In its economic outlook, the IMF forecast that global growth would shrink 4.4% this year, which would mark the worst downturn since the Great Depression. And the World Bank forecast that the pandemic could send an additional 114 million people into extreme poverty, defined as living on less than $1.90 a day.

Eric LeCompte, executive director of the international aid group Jubilee USA Network, said more debt relief and and other steps must be taken.

“Wealthy countries, who are making decisions for the entire world about the crisis, are more insulated from the extreme shocks,” LeCompte said. “Nearly 90% of all global stimulus was spent in wealthy countries and less than 3% in developing countries.”

Read more here.

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Marketplace Consults Eric LeCompte on the IMF's Response to COVID Crisis

The IMF issued a report on the global economic outlook that projected global growth would contract more than 4% this year. Marketplace consulted Eric on the projection and what it means for everyday people in developing countries. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full story. 

IMF encourages countries affected by COVID to keep spending on safety net

“We are looking at perhaps half the world’s population living in extreme poverty,” LeCompte said.

The solution, according to the IMF, is that countries should borrow and spend big to strengthen the social safety net. That means health care coverage, unemployment benefits and job retraining.

Read more here.

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Jubilee USA Statement on World Bank and IMF Annual Meetings and Communiqué

Washington DC - World leaders, Finance Ministers, heads of corporations and development groups are meeting virtually for the World Bank and IMF Annual Meetings. The International Monetary and Financial Committee, the IMF policymaking body, met as part of the Annual IMF and World Bank Meetings. The body discussed policy responses to the global COVID-19 economic crisis, including tax, aid and debt cancellation processes to support developing countries.

Eric LeCompte the Executive Director of Jubilee USA Network and a United Nations finance expert, releases the following statement on the IMFC Communiqué and meeting:

“Forecasts that more than 110 million people are falling into extreme poverty and that the global economy will contract by 4.4%, are a grim backdrop to these meetings.

"The IMF analysis released during these meetings notes that the coronavirus economic crisis will increase inequality and extreme poverty.

"Wealthy countries, who are making decisions for the entire world about the crisis, are more insulated from the extreme shocks of the crisis. Nearly 90% of all global stimulus was spent in wealthy countries and less than 3% in developing countries. 

"We've seen progress on some debt relief, but the big focus now needs to be on a process to permanently reduce debts of countries in crisis. 

"The G20 and IMF will hold a special meeting in the coming weeks on a process to permanently cut and restructure debts.

"Many developing countries in crisis are still left out of debt relief plans. Given that some of the greatest increases in poverty and job loss are in these developing countries, leaders can't afford to wait any longer on moving forward a plan that deals with these countries.

"Focusing on how the international financial systems works is critical. If we are to seize this moment to resolve this crisis and prevent the next crisis, we must improve global debt and transparency processes.

"The IMF statement is the strongest to date on the need for private creditors to participate in debt relief.

"The IMF is making progress on increasing resources for debt cancellation and extending additional concessional lending to the most vulnerable countries.

"Rich countries holding $176 billion of largely unused IMF-issued global reserve funds are transferring a small amount to support resources for poor countries. These transfers should be scaled up and used to finance debt relief.

"The IMF should move forward access to trillions of dollars in global reserve funds or the Special Drawing Rights. Developing countries would translate these funds into lifesaving measures."

Read the IMFC communique here.

Read Jubilee USA's press release on the IMF's World Economic Outlook and Global Financial Stability reports here

Read Jubilee USA's press release on the G20 Finance Ministers Meeting here.

 

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COVID Crisis: G20 Defers Action on Aid, Tax and Debt Cancellation

Washington DC - G20 finance ministers agreed to extend debt payment relief for the 73 poorest countries and, in principle, to have a common framework to cancel debts. The G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors met on global COVID-19 response plans ahead of the Annual IMF and World Bank Meetings.

"Debt payment relief for the poorest countries is good news, but it's a short term solution,” said Eric LeCompte the Executive Director of Jubilee USA Network and a United Nations finance expert. "We're disappointed not to have a stronger agreement on a permanent debt reduction process, yet, but it's hopeful that the G20 is holding a special meeting on this process in the coming weeks.”

G20 finance ministers will hold a special meeting before G20 presidents and prime ministers meet in November, on a country debt reduction plan or the “Common Framework for Debt Treatments beyond DSSI.” The announcement came as the International Monetary Fund forecast a contraction of 4.4 % for this year in the global economy and a recovery that will be long, uneven and prone to setbacks.

"The only way for some developing countries to have the resources they need to recover from the coronavirus crisis is to have a process that permanently reduces their debts,” stated LeCompte. “Given that some of the greatest increases in poverty and job loss are in these developing countries, the G20 can't afford to wait any longer on moving forward a plan.”

The G20 expressed disappointment at the absence of private creditor participation in the debt suspension initiative.

"The G20 should be doing more to press the private sector on debt relief. It seems since April, the position of the G20 has weakened on private sector participation in debt relief,” noted LeCompte. 

International tax cooperation was also a focus of the G20. The countries had vowed to agree this year to a global plan for taxing digital revenues and ensuring multinationals pay tax, but they now pushed back that timeline to mid-2021.

“Part of the reason we are in this mess, is because countries aren't raising enough revenues. Now revenues are plummeting in many countries because of the pandemic and the G20 must make more progress on global tax solutions,” explained LeCompte. "An immediate way to combat the coronavirus and support developing countries in crisis is to access trillions of dollars in global reserve funds or the Special Drawing Rights. Unfortunately the G20 made little progress on authorizing what could be a lifesaving measure for countries in crisis."

Read the G20 communique here.

Read Jubilee USA's press release on the IMF's World Economic Outlook and Global Financial Stability reports here

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Eric LeCompte Quoted in Bloomberg and Yahoo Finance on the G-20's Extended Debt Relief Plan

Bloomberg and Yahoo Finance included Eric LeCompte's thoughts on the G20 extending developing nations' debt into next year in response to the coronavirus crisis and its effects. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full story. 

G-20 Extends Debt Relief Plan Amid Warnings It’s Not Enough

The consequences for some countries are dire. The World Bank calculates that the debt of the poor nations eligible for the external debt relief initiative climbed to a record $744 billion last year. Nations are often forced to choose between servicing debt or spending on social and health programs.

“Debt payment relief for the poorest countries is good news, but it’s a short term solution,” said Eric LeCompte, the executive director of Jubilee USA Network, a non-profit group that advocates for debt relief for smaller economies.

“We’re disappointed not to have a stronger agreement on a permanent debt reduction process yet, but it’s hopeful that the G-20 is holding a special meeting on this process in the coming weeks.”

Read more here.

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Jubilee USA Statement on G20 Communiqué on COVID Debt, Tax and Aid Plans

Washington DC- The G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors met on global COVID-19 response plans ahead of the Annual IMF and World Bank Meetings. They agreed to extend debt payment relief for the 73 poorest countries and discussed tax, aid and debt cancellation processes.

Eric LeCompte the Executive Director of Jubilee USA Network and a United Nations finance expert, releases the following statement on the G20 Communiqué and the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting:

"Debt payment relief for the poorest countries is good news, but it's a short term solution.

"We're disappointed not to have a stronger agreement on a permanent debt reduction process yet, but it's hopeful that the G20 is holding a special meeting on this process in the coming weeks.

"The only way for some developing countries to have the resources they need to recover from the coronavirus crisis is to have a process that permanently reduces their debts.

"The G7, UN agencies, the Pope and hundreds of organizations are calling for a debt relief process so that countries can fight growing poverty and the loss of jobs.

"The G20 should be doing more to press the private sector on debt relief. It seems since April, the position of the G20 has weakened on private sector participation in debt relief.

"Too many developing countries in crisis are still left out of debt relief plans. It's positive that G20 negotiations are looking at how to support more countries. Given that some of the greatest increases in poverty and job loss are in these developing countries, the G20 can't afford to wait any longer on moving forward a plan.

"The G20 had vowed to make more progress on a global plan for taxing digital revenues and ensuring multinationals pay tax. Part of the reason we are in this mess, is because countries aren't raising revenues. Now revenues are plummeting in many countries because of the pandemic and the G20 must make more progress on global tax solutions.

"One of the most important ways to combat the coronavirus and support developing countries in crisis is to access trillions of dollars in global reserve funds or the Special Drawing Rights. Unfortunately the G20 made little progress on authorizing what could be a lifesaving measure for countries in crisis."

Read the G20 communique here.

Read Jubilee USA's press release on the IMF's World Economic Outlook and Global Financial Stability reports here
Read More

Eric LeCompte Quoted in Bloomberg on G20 Debt Relief

Bloomberg, Yahoo! News, and several other outlets included Eric LeCompte's thoughts on the G20 extending developing nations' debt into next year in response to the coronavirus crisis and its effects. Read an excerpt below, and click here for the full story. 

G-20 Seen Extending Poor Nations’ Debt Relief Into Next Year

“Right now the consensus is through June, not the full year, but that’s one of the things that could change over the next few days,” said Eric LeCompte, the executive director of Jubilee USA Network, a non-profit group that advocates for debt relief for smaller economies.

The debt relief is a key theme at the annual meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund being held virtually this week. The smaller Group of Seven last month backed an extension of the so-called DSSI, while signaling criticism for China for failing to fully participate. China is owed almost 60% of the money that the world’s poorest nations would be due to repay this year.

 

Read more here.

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IMF Economic Reports: Inequality and Poverty Rising Amidst COVID Crisis

Washington DC – Analyzing the economic crisis spurred by the coronavirus, the International Monetary Fund released the Global Financial Stability Report and the 2020 World Economic Outlook Report, "A Long and Difficult Ascent." The economic outlook report projects global economic growth to contract 4.4%.

"While we understand that the IMF wants to look at the crisis with some positivity, the word ascent has little place in this report. It seems that most countries are still descending,” stated Eric LeCompte, the Executive Director of the religious development organization Jubilee USA Network and a United Nations finance expert. “More than 90 million people could enter the ranks of extreme poverty this year and many countries will lose development gains they have made since the 1990s.”

According to the World Economic Outlook Report, income disparities between developed and developing economies is projected to worsen.

"It's not a surprise that the coronavirus economic crisis will worsen inequality and extreme poverty," said LeCompte. "Nearly 90% of all global stimulus was spent in wealthy countries and less than 3% in developing countries."

The IMF cautions that its projections rely on hard to predict public health and economic factors and outcomes could be worse.

The IMF Global Financial Stability report addressed the rising financial needs of developing countries due to the pandemic and rising costs of borrowing.

“Developing countries need their debts cut and access to more aid if they are to survive this crisis,” noted LeCompte.

The G20, IMF and World Bank are meeting this week on responses to the coronavirus health and economic crisis.

Read the IMF's World Economic Outlook report here.

Read the IMF's Global Financial Stability report here.

 

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Devex Features Eric LeCompte on UN High-Level Covid Financing Meeting

Dozens of world leaders gathered to discuss the economic response to the coronavirus pandemic at the United Nations High-Level Event on Financing for Development in the Era of COVID-19 and Beyond. Eric LeCompte, Executive Director of Jubilee USA Network and debt finance exert, was quoted by Devex on the meting. “From what we see, liquidity and development needs surpass $1 trillion in developing countries,” LeCompte said. “At this time a high allocation would help meet that demand. A lower allocation would be helpful but wouldn’t meet the full demand in terms COVID response and liquidity issues.” Read more here.

Proposals and pressure mount for more action on COVID-19 financing

By Adva Saldinger 

Dozens of heads of state, top United Nations officials, and the heads of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund gathered virtually last week in the largest convening of its kind about the economic response to COVID-19. They discussed a number of proposals from an ongoing U.N. process and pushed the Group of 20 and other multilateral bodies to take further action.

“Failing to take action now is not a failure of generosity but an act of self-harm,” Mark Lowcock, head of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said at the High-Level Event on Financing for Development in the Era of COVID-19 and Beyond, summing up the urgency expressed at the event.

This meeting was part of a process started by the U.N. in May to address funding the pandemic response. The process has focused on six key areas — external finance, remittances, jobs and inclusive growth; recovering better for sustainability; global liquidity and financial stability, debt vulnerability; private sector creditors engagement; and illicit financial flows — each of which had a discussion group working over the past few months to come up with a specific menu of options.

While this was a U.N. process, it “acknowledged that any decisions in the short to medium term will be made by the G-20, IMF, and World Bank,” Eric LeCompte, the executive director of the Jubilee USA Network, told Devex.

The menu of options developed through the process for finance ministers and governments was done with the “intention to be able to influence the choices and decisions the G-20, IMF, and World Bank are making between now and the end of the year.”

Menu of Policy Recommendations

While policy recommendations that emerged from the process range from new mechanisms for trade and investment to doubling down on digitization of economies, much of the discussion last week, and in the weeks and months ahead is likely to focus on debt relief and providing additional liquidity.

In April the G-20 approved the Debt Service Suspension Initiative, or DSSI, which essentially deferred debt payments for the world’s poorest countries through the end of this year. There is now a clear push for the G-20 to extend that initiative, but also to do more to compel private creditors to defer debt payments, consider relief for middle-income countries and come up with a system for debt restructuring.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres highlighted the need for debt relief in his remarks at the event, calling for it to be “expanded to all developing and middle-income countries that really need it; and these countries must have more time to make payments,” he said. “Any comprehensive solution must include engagement with private creditors and credit rating agencies.”

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said DSSI does not go far enough, and South Africa supports extending the initiative and in some cases considering debt cancellation. He also welcomed attention in the process to illicit financial flows “which pose a serious threat” to the economic and development trajectory of African countries.

Those illicit financial flows result in the African continent losing about $50 billion a year, Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo said, adding that it’s critical to ensure transparency in how COVID-19 financing relief is spent.

It is “paramount to sustain and support people and businesses until a durable exit from the pandemic is achieved everywhere,” IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva said at the meeting. “In low-income countries and emerging markets with weak fundamentals, it can only be done with international support.”

Georgieva called on the G-20 to extend DSSI, and for all creditors to work together to develop an “orderly” debt restructuring process.

Any future debt process should draw from the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries initiative launched by IMF and World Bank in 1996, Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera said at the meeting. Chakwera, who is also the chair of the 47 Least Developed Countries called for a “global stimulus package for LDCs in order to save economies and societies from collapse.”

While debt relief and access to finance is important, LDCs also need grant-based aid to recover, he said.

Africa’s finance ministers have asked for $100 billion a year for the next three years and have received less than $50 billion to date, Vera Songwe, executive secretary at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa told Devex.

The world’s wealthy countries have mobilized about $13 trillion in seven months, so providing Africa with $100 billion “is affordable and within their remit,” Songwe said in an interview with Devex.

Multilateral development banks also have an important role to play in providing additional capital, Songwe said. Donor countries should commit to recapitalizing the MDBs so they can lend more freely without being concerned that they will spend down all the funds they raised in recent capital increases, she said.

Other proposals were floated through the process, including a new fund that would support emerging economies, debt for climate swaps, proposals for mobilizing private sector engagement, improving tax administration, and more.

While the long menu of options developed and shared with governments included a lot of “actual possibilities,” in the short-term “only a handful are actually actionable,” LeCompte said.

 

What's Next

While last week’s convening had few concrete commitments, the upcoming World Bank and G-20 meetings are expected to result in some tangible announcements, most likely on debt relief, sources tell Devex.

A G-7 finance ministers meeting on Sept. 25 may provide some clues as to what those upcoming meetings might bring. The G-7 released a statement after that meeting saying it supports extending DSSI and supports the development of a common framework for future debt restructuring.

The statement also criticized China, though not by name, for classifying large state-owned financial institutions as commercial lenders and excluding them from DSSI. Those institutions will be treated as commercial claims in future debt treatments, according to the statement, which also pushed private creditors to implement the debt suspension initiative.

Later this month the G-20 and IMF are likely to announce an extension of DSSI through June, and may also address the issue of debt reduction with more specificity, though a framework is likely to take several months to develop, LeCompte said.

The upcoming G-20 and World Bank meetings will likely also discuss what to do with IMF Special Drawing Rights, which would provide countries with additional liquidity. Wealthy countries could decide to donate existing SDRs, about $176 billion worth, to poor countries through concessional lending facilities — Canada has already said that it will do so.

At the high-level event. Georgieva urged other countries to follow Canada’s lead and allow IMF to use existing special drawing rights to help countries in need.

The G-20 could also decide to support a new allocation of SDRs. If the issuance is below a $648 billion quota it would not require congressional or parliamentary approval, which seems a more palatable option for leaders. Some experts however have called for between $1 trillion and $3 trillion in SDRs to meet global needs.

“From what we see, liquidity and development needs surpass $1 trillion in developing countries,” LeCompte said. “At this time a high allocation would help meet that demand. A lower allocation would be helpful but wouldn’t meet the full demand in terms COVID response and liquidity issues.”

Read more here.

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IMF Calls for New Global Debt Policies to Confront COVID Financial Crisis

Washington DC - IMF head Kristalina Georgieva warned that developing countries could face a second wave of economic crises just as they are recovering from the coronavirus pandemic. "... There is a need to reform the international debt 'architecture' ... to provide speedy and sufficiently deep debt relief to countries that need it, benefitting not only these countries but the system as a whole," wrote Georgieva and other top IMF officials in a Fund blog published Thursday.
 
"The IMF is declaring that global processes and policies must be reformed to address skyrocketing debt levels and countries facing debt crises," shared Eric LeCompte, the Executive Director of the religious development group Jubilee USA and a UN finance expert. "If we had better debt processes in place before the coronavirus struck, we may not have experienced an economic crisis of this magnitude."
 
In addition to international debt policy and process reforms, the Georgieva blog asserts the G20 should continue suspending debt payments for poor countries.

In April, the G20 agreed to the Debt Service Suspension Initiative, a process for the 73 poorest countries to stop paying debts through 2020. The initiative allowed 43 of the poorest countries to free $5.3 billion for health and social spending to respond to the pandemic. Without G20 action, the initiative expires at the end of the year. 

"Unless we move forward additional aid and debt relief, too many countries could see lost decades of development," said LeCompte.

According to the IMF, about half of low-income countries faced severely high debt levels or financial crisis prior to the onslaught of COVID-19.

"Debt relief and aid needs to be increased and expanded to include more developing countries struggling to confront the health and economic impacts of the pandemic," noted LeCompte. "As we reform debt processes and policies to meet this current crisis, we must also strengthen processes to prepare us to combat future financial crises."

Read Georgieva's IMF blog here
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