It is vital to increase quota resources for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) before year-end, its chief, Kristalina Georgieva, said on Sunday, while urging members of the G20 bloc to deliver on a promise of $100 billion a year in climate funds.
In a declaration at its summit in New Delhi this weekend, the grouping vowed to tackle debt vulnerabilities in low and middle-income countries “in an effective, comprehensive and systematic manner”, but offered no fresh plan of action.
“G20 members must lead by example in delivering on the promises of $100 billion per year for climate finance, supported by strengthening the multilateral development banks,” Georgieva said in a statement at the end of the two-day summit.
“Countries also need to mobilise domestic resources to finance and manage the green transition through tax reforms, effective and efficient public spending, strong fiscal institutions, and deep local debt markets.”
She urged the grouping to strengthen the global financial safety net.
“To make the global economy stronger and more resilient in a more shock-prone world, it is vital to reach an agreement to increase the IMF’s quota resources before the end of the year,” she said.
Such a pact would secure resources needed for the Fund’s interest-free support to the poorest countries through the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust, she added.
The G20 summit also pledged to strengthen and reform multilateral development banks, while accepting a proposal to regulate cryptocurrencies more tightly worldwide.
“More work lies ahead, including in the realm of digital money and crypto assets,” Georgieva said. International Monetary Fund chief Kristalina Georgieva said on Sunday that it was vital to increase the Fund’s quota of resources before the end of the year.
Annual inflation in Egypt hit 39.7 percent in August, official figures showed Sunday, an all-time high as the Arab world’s most populous country grapples with a punishing economic crisis.
It comes after a previous record of 38.2 percent in July and amid an unrelenting downturn that has seen the currency shed half its value against the US dollar since early last year.
Food and drink prices alone rose 71.9 percent year-on-year, said the state statistics agency CAPMAS.
The economic crisis in the import-dependent country was catalysed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year, which destabilised crucial food supplies and unsettled global markets.
Investors pulled billions out of Cairo’s foreign reserves, which remain buoyed by deposits from wealthy Gulf allies, whose promises to purchase Egyptian state assets have however fallen short of government targets.
Even before the current crisis, 30 percent of Egyptians were living below the poverty line, according to the World Bank, with another 30 percent considered vulnerable to also falling into poverty.
Egypt, with more than 105 million people, has been dependent on bailouts in recent years, from both oil-rich Gulf allies and the International Monetary Fund.
According to Ministry of Planning figures, the country’s external debt bill has tripled over the past decade, rising to a record high of $165.4 billion this year.
Researcher Robert Springborg of the Italian Institute of International Affairs has blamed Egypt’s economic model, in which the military plays a key role, arguing it is based on “profligate borrowing for prestige projects with limited economic benefits”.
The crowning jewel of the government’s projects is the $58 billion New Administrative Capital that experts have called “a vanity project”.
Last year, the IMF approved a $3 billion loan for Egypt conditioned on “a permanent shift to a flexible exchange rate regime”.
The smaller-than-expected loan was intended to unlock other sources of funding, namely from regional allies.
But Egypt has failed to raise its target funding, and the IMF has not issued its first review of the programme or the second tranche of the loan. Both were originally expected in March.
The IMF and Gulf capitals have demanded a fully flexible exchange rate, economic reforms and an end to the notoriously obscure business dealings of the military.
But despite repeated rumours of a fresh devaluation, authorities have kept the pound pegged at around 31 EGP to the dollar since January.
Consumer prices have continued to steadily rise, adding to the burden of families who are struggling to make ends meet.
Severe foreign currency shortages have also heavily impacted the economy, limiting imports and causing a parallel currency market to surge up to 25 percent higher than bank rates.
Remittances from Egyptians abroad, the country’s biggest source of foreign revenue, have been falling since the crisis began, as people turn to the parallel market to send money home.
Between July 2022 and March 2023, the central bank reported a 26.1 percent fall in remittances -- one of several “volatile, vulnerable” sources of foreign currency Egypt relies on, according to Springborg.
Reuters