Jamaica Gleaner

Keeping small islands financiall­y afloat

- Ralph Gonsalves is prime minister of St Vincent & the Grenadines; Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa is prime Minister of Samoa; and Wavel Ramkalawan is president of the Seychelles. © Project Syndicate 2023 www.project-syndicate.org

IT IS too early to tell whether all the talk about reforming developmen­t finance at this year’s Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank spring meetings will translate into meaningful policy action for the Global South.

But multilater­al financial institutio­ns increasing­ly recognise the need to evolve to remain relevant in light of new global challenges, and world leaders are paying attention to innovative approaches such as Barbadian Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley’s Bridgetown Initiative to address the immediate financial needs of debtdistre­ssed countries or Secretary General António Guterres’s stimulus to deliver the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

Better late than never. The current internatio­nal financial architectu­re is outdated and ill-equipped to handle the massive disruption­s caused by climate change, a global economic downturn, the COVID-19 pandemic, and changes in income distributi­on fuelled by technologi­cal developmen­ts and globalised competitio­n. The unique geographic and demographi­c characteri­stics of small island developing states – SIDS – like ours make it even harder to cope with these disruption­s.

The remoteness of SIDS, coupled with limited usable land and small population­s, all but guarantee significan­t barriers to integratio­n in a fast-paced global economy. Our countries are overdepend­ent on imports, especially of food and energy, and often rely heavily on a single economic sector (usually tourism), making us prone to supply chain disruption­s and other external shocks.

The United Nations has long recognised our special circumstan­ces, but the internatio­nal community has done little to help us manage them. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the global financial system, where we are often left to fend for ourselves – small fish at the mercy of predators that profit handsomely from the repackagin­g of our debt.

The problem is that concession­al financing is primarily tied to traditiona­l measures of developmen­t, namely a country’s GNI or gross national income. But the relatively high income of SIDS – more than half qualify as upper middleinco­me countries – prevents many from accessing the cheap finance offered to the lowest-income countries.

Using income as the sole determinan­t for financial assistance means more debt for SIDS, which disproport­ionately suffer the effects of global warming and other external shocks. There is no way to escape this Catch22 without a credible framework that takes these vulnerabil­ities into account.

The Multidimen­sional Vulnerabil­ity Index currently under considerat­ion at the UN General Assembly could be a lifesaver. The MVI, a universal ranking based on developing countries’ susceptibi­lity to external shocks, provides the basis for internatio­nal institutio­ns like the IMF and the World Bank to allocate the concession­al financing needed to prepare and recover from unforeseen crises.

While the Bridgetown Initiative addresses the immediacy of the climate-change threat, SIDS measure highly across all three dimensions of vulnerabil­ity: economic and social as well as environmen­tal.

For example, the gas crisis in Europe and high inflation in the United States, both fuelled by the war in Ukraine, have dominated headlines over the past year. Yet the war’s economic ramificati­ons have been especially painful for remote island states like the Seychelles, where the energy shortage is compounded by higher transport costs. High inflation and soaring airfares have deterred European visitors, underminin­g the post-COVID recovery of the country’s tourism industry, a crucial source of budget revenue.

As for the social dimension, the pandemic has had a profound effect on Samoa and other Pacific island states. Some may argue that they were spared the worst health outcomes of COVID-19, owing to their isolation.

But one must also consider their capacity constraint­s, including their limited ability to provide health services. Without the workers and facilities needed to weather the waves of infection experience­d by larger countries, these states were forced to implement stricter lockdown measures for far longer than the rest of the world. The social, psychologi­cal, and economic effects of these policies will be felt for a generation or more.

Finally, while higher temperatur­es and rising sea levels pose a grave threat to SIDS, they are not the only environmen­tal concerns. The population of St Vincent & the Grenadines is at the mercy of an active volcano – a ticking time bomb that last went off in 2021.

Moreover, the island chain sits in the Atlantic hurricane belt; these storms will become stronger and more frequent as the climate crisis deepens.

When a country’s GDP could be wiped out in an instant, how relevant is income as a measure of vulnerabil­ity?

It is true that GNI per capita remains the most reliable way to identify the leastdevel­oped countries, which are in serious need of financial aid and other concession­al resources to stand on their own. The MVI does not seek to replace GNI or interfere in the provision of material assistance to those countries that need it most. Instead, it is designed to complement this process by identifyin­g vulnerable countries that also deserve concession­al financing but currently have no access to it.

It will always feel like an inconvenie­nt time to reform the internatio­nal financial architectu­re. But that architectu­re is denying adequate shelter to vulnerable countries like ours: we are being forced to pay a premium for unsound accommodat­ion. If multilater­al financial institutio­ns take too long to address the design flaws, the entire structure will eventually collapse.

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 ?? ?? Wavel Ramkalawan GUEST COLUMNISTS
Wavel Ramkalawan GUEST COLUMNISTS
 ?? ?? Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa
Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa
 ?? ?? Ralph Gonsalves
Ralph Gonsalves

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