See also:
» 23.04.2010 - World Bank funding targets Africa’s malaria fight
» 26.03.2010 - Aid tied to service delivery still best, WB
» 18.03.2010 - Ministers to adopt strategies to fight job scarcity
» 17.03.2010 - Don’t despair MDGs reachable, Ban
» 17.03.2010 - Trade experts discuss ways to help poor countries
» 04.03.2010 - Africa’s green energy under-exploited
» 04.03.2010 - Mercenary activities focus at Addis Ababa meeting
» 04.03.2010 - Africa media development projects awarded funding











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Africa | World
Economy - Development | Society

IMF announce new package to support world's poorest

afrol News, 12 January - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has announced a new package of lending facilities to the world’s poorest nations. The facility according to the fund, is the biggest revamp of its support for low-income countries in two decades.

The measures, which became effective on 7 January, will boost lending resources, raise borrowing limits, eliminate interest payments for two years, and offer more flexible terms tailored to country circumstances.

The package adopted in July 2009, when the IMF’s Executive Board approved the new lending facilities. Activation of the measures was conditioned on consent by lenders and subsidy contributors to the financing mechanisms supporting the new facilities. This process was completed on 7 January, the IMF said.

An IMF report on the implications of the global financial crisis for low-income countries had warned in March 2009 that the global crisis has hit poor countries especially hard, posing serious threats to their hard-won gains in boosting economic growth and creating a need for additional foreign financing to mitigate the impact of the crisis.

Also in 2009, at an IMF-convened conference in Dar es Salaam of government, business, civil society, and opinion leaders to address these issues, the IMF committed to increase its support for Africa. It pledged more financing, greater flexibility, enhanced policy dialogue, and a further strengthening of Africa’s voice in the Fund.

As part of its response, the IMF has already more than doubled its financial assistance to low-income countries. New IMF concessional lending commitments to low-income countries in 2009 reached $3.8 billion, compared with the historical average of $1 billion a year.

The Fund has said the new measures represent a significant additional effort in the coming years.

The IMF support package includes, mobilization of additional resources, including from sales of an agreed amount of IMF gold, to boost the Fund’s concessional lending capacity to up to $17 billion through 2014, including up to $8 billion in the first two years. This exceeds the call by the Group of Twenty industrial and emerging market economies for $6 billion in new lending over two to three years.

Other measures include, Interest relief, with zero payments on outstanding IMF concessional loans through the end-2011 to help low-income countries cope with the global crisis; Permanently higher concessionality of Fund financial support - with annual interest rates regularly reviewed so as to preserve a higher level of concessionality; Doubling of average loan access limits for low-income countries, and; tailored set of financial instruments to the diverse needs of low-income countries and better suited to mitigate the global crisis impact.

The IMF has further said that the activation of the new lending windows means that existing arrangements under the Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility will automatically be converted into Extended Credit Facility arrangements. "Existing arrangements under the Exogenous Shocks Facility, however, will remain in effect until their expiration or cancellation. The Fund will now be able to provide more flexible assistance to countries experiencing shocks or other balance of payments needs under the three new facilities," the IMF explained.


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