Oman Daily Observer

Supply chains, inflation cloud vaccine at IMF — World Bank meetings

- — Reuters

Supply chain woes and growing inflation concerns pushed aside a widening gap in Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns and mounting debt problems for developing countries as the top concerns for global policymake­rs at Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank annual meetings this week.

Relatively little new progress was made on increasing vaccine supplies to developing countries, although officials highlighte­d an increasing divergence between rich and poor countries as a growing financial and economic risk.

The focus on the normalisat­ion pains that wealthier economies are experienci­ng and a World Bank data-rigging scandal that had clouded the future of IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva proved a disappoint­ment for antipovert­y groups.

“Given how the pandemic is becoming worse in most of the world’s countries, I’m concerned by the lack of action at the meetings on vaccine distributi­on, debt relief and general pandemic response’’, said Eric Lecompte, Executive Director of the Jubilee USA Network, a religious developmen­t group.

Communique­s issued by G20 finance leaders and the IMF’S steering committee pledged to increase vaccine supplies, but did not identify specific new goals or initiative­s to expand financing or distributi­on. Instead, they gave greater prominence to growing inflation pressures, calling on central banks to monitor closely whether they are transitory or could unanchor inflation expectatio­ns.

World Health Organizati­on chief Tedros Adhananom Ghebreyesu­s told an IMF forum that the world is falling behind on goals to immunise 40 per cent of the world’s population by the end of this year, and criticised wealthy countries for approving third booster shots when much of the world’s population has yet to receive a single vaccine dose.

“The donations are not enough. It’s very disappoint­ing that it’s taking so long for the world to really commit” to reaching vaccinatio­n goals, he said.

The IMF said a “great vaccine divide” was keeping developing countries mired in low growth as they struggle with high coronaviru­s infection rates. This, along with supply chain bottleneck­s, semiconduc­tor shortages and rising price pressures in advanced economies, prompted the IMF to trim its global growth forecast for 2021.

Some policymake­rs were more focused on managing the next phases of economic recovery after unpreceden­ted fiscal support, and other multilater­al issues, such as implementi­ng a deal to revamp global corporate taxation.

“My feeling about all the meetings we had in Washington, and during these IMF meetings, is that we are beyond Covid’’, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told reporters.

I’m concerned by the lack of action at the meetings on vaccine distributi­on, debt relief and general pandemic response

ERIC LECOMPTE

Executive Director, Jubilee USA Network

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