You are on page 1of 2

       Search

ABOUT RESEARCH COUNTRIES CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT NEWS

VIDEOS DATA PUBLICATIONS COVID-19

PRESS RELEASE NO. 23/53

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva Urges G20 Leadership to


Strengthen the International Financial Architecture
Bengaluru, India
February 25, 2023

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva made the following statement today
at the first meeting of the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors in Bengaluru, India:

I would like to thank the Government of India for the generous hospitality and Minister of Finance Nirmala
Sitharaman and Governor Shaktikanta Das for their inspirational leadership of the G20 meetings as we
navigate together another challenging year.

India is a relative bright spot and an important engine of growth for the world economy, representing
about 15 percent of global growth in 2023. India’s remarkable progress on Digital Public Infrastructure
provides a strong basis to secure robust and inclusive growth over the medium term.

With global growth set to slow in 2023 and remain below its historical average, too many people in too
many countries are struggling to make ends meet—a point that I highlighted in my recent blog on policy
priorities forthe G20 (https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/02/22/policy-priorities-for-the-g20-
one-earth-one-family-one-future). The international community, therefore, has a responsibility to come
together to find solutions for the most vulnerable members of our global family. This calls for urgent
action to strengthen the international financial architecture, especially in the area of debt resolution and
strengthening the global financial safety net.

Debt resolution

In light of rising debt vulnerabilities in many countries, I strongly endorse efforts to


strengthen the debt architecture and improve the speed and effectiveness of debt
resolution.

Sovereign debt vulnerabilities, already elevated before the pandemic, have been exacerbated by the
shocks stemming from Covid-19 and Russia’s war against Ukraine. This is particularly the case for
developing and low-income countries with very limited policy space and huge development needs.
It is therefore imperative for the G20 to strengthen the debt architecture. The G20 did so in 2020 with the
Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) and by establishing the Common Framework (CF) for debt
resolution.

Since then, the CF delivered a debt operation for Chad. It is now critical to complete Zambia’s debt
restructuring, establish a Creditor Committee for Ghana, and advance work with Ethiopia.

Nonetheless, more predictable, timely, and orderly processes are needed both for countries under the CF
and for those not covered by it, including Sri Lanka and Suriname.

This means that we must enhance dialogue and collaboration on debt issues. This is the goal of the new
Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable (GSDR): to bring together creditors—official, old and new, and private
—and debtor countries to discuss key issues that can facilitate the debt resolution process. We launched
the GSDR under the auspices of India’s G20 presidency last week at the deputies’ level, followed by an
engaged and constructive principals meeting earlier today. We will further build on this discussion during
the World Bank-IMF Spring Meetings in April.

Strengthening the Global Financial Safety Net

In our role at the center of the Global Financial Safety Net, the IMF has been scaling
up lending as our members confront the significant economic challenges that the
past few years have brought.

Through our standard lending facilities and emergency financing, the IMF has approved $272 billion of
financing to 94 countries since the beginning of the pandemic, of which 57 are low-income countries.

We have also stepped up our efforts to help tackle the global food crisis. Several countries have
benefited from the IMF’s new Food Shock Window, including Malawi, Guinea, and Haiti, and more are
expected to do so.

The new RST is providing long-term affordable finance to help members implement strong climate
policies and catalyze additional financing. So far, four RST-supported programs have been approved
by the IMFs Executive Board: Costa Rica, Barbados, Rwanda, and Bangladesh. With many more RST
requests expected, we call on our members for further pledges to channel SDRs to the trust.

In a world of great uncertainty and repeated turbulence, it is critical to further bolster the IMF’s capacity to
support its members. This applies most urgently to our concessional financing for low-income countries
through our Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGT). Demand for PRGT support has reached
unprecedented levels and can only be met if matched by an increase in PRGT loan and subsidy resources.
In addition, a successful quota review—which the IMF’s membership has committed to complete by
December 2023—is critical for a strong Global Financial Safety Net. The latter has always been important
for global stability and is even more important in today’s challenging global environment, especially for
the most vulnerable countries and people. Our common interest is to secure a well-functioning and
integrated global economy, for the sake of a more secure and prosperous world.

MEDIA RELATIONS
PRESS OFFICER: TING YAN
PHONE: 
PHONE: +1 202 623-7100 EMAIL: MEDIA@IMF.ORG
 @IMFSpokesperson (https://twitter.com/IMFSpokesperson)

You might also like