International Monetary Fund (Washington, DC)

Africa: IMF Pledges to Help Continent Get Through Global Crisis

11 March 2009


press release

The IMF pledged to help Africa get through the global economic crisis by providing extra funding and technical assistance, and offered to be the voice of Africa at coming talks of major industrial and emerging market countries in London convened to agree ways to combat the worldwide trade and business slump.

Launching a two-day conference of African financial officials, business leaders, and academics in the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said that the meeting was being held at a critical juncture, with the world facing what he dubbed a “Great Recession.”

“The IMF expects global growth to slow below zero this year, the worst performance in most of our lifetimes. Continued deleveraging by the world’s financial institutions, combined with a collapse in consumer and business confidence, is depressing domestic demand across the globe. World trade is falling at an alarming rate, and commodity prices have tumbled,” he told attendees at the opening plenary, also addressed by Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete.

“Even though the crisis has been slow in reaching Africa’s shores, we all know that it is coming—and its impact will be severe. This ‘third wave’ of the crisis, which is hitting low-income countries, will depress economic growth, put budgets under strain, and weaken external accounts. And the threat is not only economic: there is a real risk that millions will be thrown back into poverty,” Strauss-Kahn said in prepared remarks.

Kikwete said the crisis threatened to reverse or even wipe out the socio-economic gains made by Africa in recent decades.

Speakers at the March 10–11 conference include Benno Ndulu, Governor of the Bank of Tanzania; Trevor Manuel, Finance Minister of South Africa; Youssef Boutros-Ghali, Finance Minister of Egypt; Yuan Chen, Chairman of the China Development Bank; Jeffrey Sachs, professor at Columbia University; Angel Gurria, Secretary General of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; and Kofi Annan, former secretary general of the United Nations.

Input to G-20

The conference is taking place ahead of the meeting of the Group of Twenty (G-20) leading industrialized and emerging market countries in London on April 2. The conference will follow up on an action agenda agreed last November in Washington to try to get the world economy out of the current tailspin.

Strauss-Kahn said he had been encouraged by the leadership role taken by the G-20 to provide a policy response to the crisis. But he said he was concerned that the grouping was not well equipped to hear the voice of Africa, or more generally, low-income countries.

“I therefore see this conference as an excellent platform for African countries to convey key messages to the G-20 Leaders Summit being held in London next month. In this conference, the IMF can be your voice,” he declared.

Annan, also addressing the plenary, urged that Africa should be fully represented in discussions on reforming the global financial architecture, including negotiations on regulation of the global financial system. “It is not enough being occasional guests at exclusive Club meetings,” he said.

Annan’s message was also spelled out by Kikwete in his opening speech. The Tanzanian President said the impact of the crisis goes beyond the borders of the nations responsible. “It is therefore important that creating effective mechanisms for surveillance of the international and national financial systems should be a matter of global interest. We too in Africa, though poor, have profound interest in the matter.

He said the mandate of the IMF for surveillance of economies should be strengthened. “In carrying out this role, evenhandedness is very important. There should be no untouchable countries when it comes to financial impropriety and lack of effective regulatory framework because its consequences affect all of us.”

Warning of civil unrest

Strauss-Kahn said the voices of the poor who will be worst hit by the crisis must be heard. “We must ensure that Africa is not left out. This is not only about protecting economic growth and household incomes—it is also about containing the threat of civil unrest, perhaps even of war. It is about people and their futures,” he stated.

In an analysis released ahead of the conference, the IMF said that economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa is expected to slow to 3¼ percent in 2009 from 5 percent in 2008—half of what was expected a year ago.

Strauss-Kahn said that with growth around the world coming to a virtual standstill, demand for Africa’s products is plunging. Tourism revenue is also likely to decline as consumers around the world are tightening their belts, and trade financing and investment flows have become scarcer.

Need for more funding

While some African countries were better placed than in the past to weather the crisis, many African economies will need significant additional concessional financing to get through. The IMF projects that the 22 most vulnerable low-income countries—many of which are in Africa—will require at least $25 billion in additional concessional financing this year alone to keep their foreign reserves at safe levels. If global economic and financial conditions deteriorate further, the financing need will be significantly larger.

Strauss-Kahn called on the international community to both help Africa and avoid protectionist measures that could harm the continent. The IMF, he said, would move quickly to provide African members with the financial resources they need. Last year, the IMF backed countries suffering from the food and fuel price shocks, reaching 15 new financing agreements with African member countries in 2008—up from only four in 2007—and increased access under 8 existing arrangements.

Former U.N. secretary general Annan said that Africa could be part of the solution by including it in a global stimulus plan that would create jobs and promote economic activity. But African countries needed a dramatic increase in concessional lending and temporary financial support to help them cope. The trillions of dollars found to bail out companies and stimulate the economies of advanced countries undermined the claim that money could not be found to fight poverty.

Double concessional lending

Looking ahead, Strauss-Kahn said his goal was to at least double the IMF’s concessional lending resources. “I urge partner countries to support me in this, so that additional resources for Africa can be available as soon as possible. I am hopeful that significant progress on this front can be made in the near future,” he stated.

The IMF was trying to increase the flexibility of its financing by exploring better ways to provide short-term financing to members facing immediate financing needs. Raising access limits, which have become increasingly binding, is also under discussion. The IMF is also trying to streamline conditionality, and tailor it better to the circumstances of each individual country.

The IMF also wanted to strengthen ownership of the Fund. “Specifically, we need to implement recent agreements on rebalancing quota shares, and also agree on a timetable for the next stage of quota reform. I am hopeful that both can be achieved this year—with welcome consequences for amplifying the voice of our African members,” Strauss-Kahn added.

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AllAfrica - All the Time
Author: chokora
Thu Mar 12 06:52:15 2009

" The IMF pledged to help Africa .."

Now. The clowns would make us assume that Africa needs them.

Africa doesn't.

After decades of IMF and its "structural" nonsense, the countries "helped" by IMF are worse off than they were 20 - 40 years ago. Meanwhile the IMF has grown by leaps and bounds - with many of those at IMF waxing very prosperous - and the wealth of the whites (the stakeholders) has been protected and multiplied.

And the "experts" at IMF cannot help their kith and kin avoid the current epic financial meltdown and the dire economic recession. Duplicity. [Is the duplicity of thew white man new to the Africans?]

The IMF pledged to help itself to Africa's wealth. And while they are at it, they will help the white kith and kin.

Author: Faye
Fri Mar 13 02:07:44 2009

The dilemma that the IMF has agreed to increase lending to Africa is that the donor countries had have plead to increase AID funding to Africa and they have not deliver on their plead and this is a distraction from what Africa actually need.

The European has ones again come to Africa to tell them they will solve their problems for them. The first time Europeans came to Africa to solve our problems we end up with enslavement. The second time they claim to be enhancing civilization and the institutionalization of education and gust what we end up with colonialism.

I don’t like talking about the past because I like being constructive and I think we African should have constructive and practical discussion rather than being passionate. But when Europeans come to Africa to tell us how to solve our problems, I have no choice but to quote from history.

We African’s understand what more debt means for Africa, More debt to be repaid, more unbalance budget, more depreciation of our currencies, more negative trade unbalances, more bad credit ratings, less investment for the privet and public sector, more of our governments begging for AID from foreign diplomats.

Africa doesn’t need loans that are restricted to expand our deficits by spending on social policies that we cannot afford and that has no return to pay for the loans. Africa needs free trade and access to Western markets, access to the Western financial market to raise funs and loan money from the IMF to be spent on developing industries to create jobs and profit used to repay loans.

This is what Africa should demand on the up coming G20 meeting.

Author: chokora
Tue Mar 10 21:20:02 2009

IMF - Meltdown Threatens Continent's Economic Successes

Is that the best IMF can do? If so, those phony "experts" at IMF may be disappointed to learn that many Africans know as much.

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