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New head of Latin American developmen­t bank launches early push for capital increase

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WA S H I N G T O N ,

(Reuters) - The new head of Latin America’s main financing institutio­n hopes to leverage concerns about Chinese lending to win the support of

U.S. lawmakers for boosting the bank’s yearly lending capacity to $20 billion as the region grapples with the COVID-19 crisis.

Mauricio Claver

Carone, a senior adviser to

U. S. President Donald

Trump who took the helm at the Inter- American

Developmen­t Bank on Mauricio

Oct. 1, said he has already Claver-Carone begun discussion­s with Democrats and Republican­s in Congress, and expects to finalize a capital increase plan for the bank’s board by March. The United States is the IDB’s largest shareholde­r with 30% of the vote.

A new concept paper submitted to the Bank’s board puts the region’s financing needs at $25 billion a year at a time when it has been hard-hit by the pandemic, and lending by China, the United States and other countries is down sharply.

“The IDB could and should be at $20 billion per year in lending,” Claver-Carone told Reuters in an interview. “That would make a huge difference in the region.”

Claver-Carone said his outreach to U.S. lawmakers month before any board action was a bit “unorthodox,” but was intended to smooth the way for approval of the capital increase.

Winning U.S. support for funding multilater­al institutio­ns is usually difficult and could be even tougher during the current crisis. Some Democrats could also balk after opposing Trump’s nomination of Claver-Carone, a U.S. citizen, for a job traditiona­lly held by someone from Latin America.

Economists say urgent help is needed, given high levels of debt across the region, and estimates that the COVID-19 crisis will push health care funding needs over $150 billion.

Argentina and Ecuador have already restructur­ed their external debt this year, and the entire region is facing an 8.1% contractio­n in economic output this year, with only a partial and uneven recovery on the horizon in 2021. China pumped up lending to Latin America in the early 2000s, but backed off in recent years as a drop in exports caused by the U.S.-China trade war cut foreign currency reserves. Chinese lending dropped to $1 billion in 2019 after peaking around $35 billion a decade ago, Claver-Carone said, citing data compiled by the independen­t Inter-American Dialogue think tank.

Growing concerns about the lack of transparen­cy in Chinese lending, especially to developing economies, could help rally support for an IDB capital increase, he said. “It’s a huge selling point,” he said, describing Ecuador’s continued need for Chinese lending as “Exhibit A” for why the bank needed a bigger capital base.

Ecuador recently completed a $6.5 billion financing program with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund after renegotiat­ing some $17.4 billion in sovereign bonds and winning agreement to defer the payment of principal on loans from Chinese banks.

“Ecuador was essentiall­y forced to negotiate with the Chinese for extended financing so the debt could be more sustainabl­e,” Claver-Carone said, adding that Chinese lending was part of what landed Ecuador in trouble in the first place.

“And I’ve made that case to Congress. Here’s a president who is trying to turn around his country, and he did everything the right way. But he doesn’t have enough money and essentiall­y had to go back to the Chinese,” he said.

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