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Low-Income Countries Need Increased
Financing to Cope
with Crisis, Says IMF Managing Director Strauss-Kahn
Press Release No. 09/305
September 17, 2009
Even as global economic recovery becomes more certain, rich countries need to
step up their support to poorer countries so they can quickly rebound from the
crisis that came from the advanced economies, Managing Director of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) Dominique Strauss-Kahn said today. “We must
make sure that any global recovery also lifts the low-income countries. These
countries desperately need additional financing to tide them over, to give them
adequate breathing space to cope with this crisis”, said Mr. Strauss-Kahn in a
speech, today at the Center for Global Development in Washington, DC.
Mr. Strauss-Kahn emphasized that most low-income countries have responded
well to the global financial crisis thanks to sound economic policies. “Since
many of these countries ran good policies, they built foundations to ward off
the storm. In the past, many low-income countries facing such a financial
squeeze would have been forced to slash government spending, put administrative
constraints on imports, or simply not pay their bills. But this time is
different”, he said. Because of improved policies, three quarters of low-income
countries have been able to increase their budget deficits to help combat the
crisis. Of 27 low-income countries with available data, 26 have been able to
preserve or increase social spending—a significant achievement in the current
environment.
The Managing Director also said that the there had been an unprecedented
scaling up of IMF financial support and policy advice to low-income countries .
This has helped provide poorer countries with the necessary room to ease
macroeconomic policies. Mr. Strauss-Kahn added that the Fund had gone “above and
beyond” what the G20 asked at the London summit in April. The IMF has increased
its concessional lending to $17 billion through 2014, and is front-loading this
assistance so that $8 billion is available over the next two years. In addition,
the IMF Executive Board approved zero interest payments up to the end of 2011
for all concessional loans and lower interest rates on a permanent basis
thereafter (See
Press Release: IMF Announces Unprecedented Increase in Financial Support to
Low-Income Countries ).
Thus far, low-income countries have weathered the global financial crisis
better than expected, the Managing Director said. ”But low-income countries
remain highly vulnerable”, he stressed, “so we cannot be complacent”. He added
that poor countries have longer-term needs for development financing, going well
beyond what the IMF has the mandate or capacity to provide. As the recent
drought in East Africa suggests, there may be more challenges to come in the
wake of the crisis. “At times like this, there is always a temptation for
countries to retreat inwards, to look first at their own problems, to respond
primarily to domestic political needs and demands. I understand that. But the
world community cannot ignore the needs of the low-income countries, especially
since the poorer countries are paying the price for rich country mistakes”,
added Mr. Strauss-Kahn “Countries must resist the temptation to reduce aid, or
to engage in trade or financial protectionism”.
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