BARBADOS-IMF: New instrument to help build economic and climate change resilience

sherrylynclarke@nationnews.com. — Barbados

IMF’s, Kristalina Georgieva and Prime Minister Mia Mottley. (GP)

Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Kristalina Georgieva, on Tuesday June 21 said the establishment of a new instrument, the Resilience and Sustainability Trust, will help countries build economic and climate change resilience.

Speaking at the Grantley Adams International Airport minutes after her team arrived for talks with Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley and her team, Georgieva said this was something for which the latter had advocated.       

“Prime Minister Mottley for years has been arguing the IMF and other financial institutions should provide concessional financing on the basis of vulnerability of countries, not just income levels, and now what you have been advocating for Prime Minister, is finally a reality,” she said.

Additionally, she said, the IMF was for the first time offering long maturity and grace period for countries in its programmes.

In response, Mottley was thankful the institution understood the challenges nations such as Barbados faced.

“The response with the establishment of the Resilience and Sustainability Trust is evidence that the IMF not only has recognised the problem, but it cares enough to put an instrument in place to meet the needs of these countries that are on the frontline of the climate crisis,” the Prime Minister said.

Georgieva is the first managing director of the IMF to visit this part of the Caribbean.

“Why this visit is so important to us at the IMF, because as we all know, the world is faced with tremendous challenges and they are hitting Barbados and other countries in the Caribbean hard.

“We had the pandemic impacting tourism dependent economies dramatically and now we have a crisis on top of a crisis with the war in Ukraine pushing energy and food prices up. With inflation threatening the incomes of people, with the economies still struggling to recover from the pandemic, it is so important that we all do our best to support the countries and the people here,” Georgieva said.

She told Mottley countries needed to not only build resilience for now, but for future shocks, and that is where the IMF can assist as “steadfast partners of the Caribbean”.

“We worked with Barbados to build economic resilience. It paid off when the [COVID-19] pandemic hit because the country was much better protected. We want to build on that for the future.”

Meanwhile Mottley said the region was facing a triple crisis – climate change, the pandemic and now the war in Ukraine – which has compounded an already bad supply chain problem. And Barbados, like other countries, was “facing and reeling from the increase in fuel and food prices in the world”.

She said the parties must come together to determine “how we can continue to shield our people, while at the same time reinforcing the economic fundamentals that would lead to growth, because ultimately, it is only growth that will take us out of this condition”.

Georgieva said they would also hold discussion with policymakers from other Caribbean countries later this month. (SAT)

—-

IMF CHIEF HEAPS PRAISE ON BARBADOS

Barbados is being held aloft as proof that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is no longer the institution that pushes countries into economic reforms at the expense of pain and social dislocation.

This was made clear by managing director of the IMF, Kristalina Georgieva, who noted that unlike the tough structural adjustments of years gone by that gave little consideration to the social cost, Barbados had emerged from its four-year programme a stronger economy without sacrificing the most vulnerable.

“The Barbados programme here is very successful, and it is an example of agility and adaptability because of changing conditions. We not only made sure that we protect the most vulnerable people in society but also key objectives of the Government to bring forward development in the country,” said Georgieva, who was speaking at a press conference at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre at the conclusion of her four-day visit to Barbados.

She said the programme was quick to adjust to the exogenous shocks which Barbados faced during the period, ensuring that the economic reforms did not add greater hardship to citizens and residents. (CLM)

Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: