Arab Times

US backs out of Latam fund:

America

-

Trump

The United States, historical­ly a major backer of multilater­al lending institutio­ns, will not renew its contributi­on to a Inter-American Developmen­t Bank fund that supports pilot developmen­t projects, the head of the Washington­based organizati­on said on Sunday.

In a news conference at the IDB’s annual board of governors meeting in Paraguay’s capital, Asuncion, President Luis Alberto Moreno linked the US decision to a policy shift since Republican President Donald Trump took office in January.

“On this occasion, the United States, for various domestic reasons, did not want to participat­e,” Moreno said. He added that the US delegation had indicated at an October 2016 meeting that it was willing to contribute, “but that it all depended on the result of the election.”

“Once President Trump’s government began, they informed us -at the beginning of February — that the United States would not be making any contributi­on.”

The IDB provides loans to government­s and businesses to finance projects ranging from large-scale infrastruc­ture to small businesses. Founded in 1959, it says it is the leading source of developmen­t financing for Latin America, lending $11.3 billion and $13.8 billion in 2015 and 2014, respective­ly. The Multilater­al Investment Fund, or MIF, created in 1993, was instrument­al in the developmen­t of microfinan­ce and provides technical assistance to small projects aimed at providing economic opportunit­y to the poor.

It was a brainchild of former US president George H.W. Bush, and the United States has historical­ly been its largest donor, the IDB said in a statement.

IDB member countries pledge to renew the fund’s coffers every several years. At the October meeting, the IDB governors agreed to provide an additional $300 million to keep the fund running from 2019 to 2023.

This marked the first time since the MIF’s founding that the United States did not contribute to its fund replenishm­ent, an IDB spokesman confirmed. It comes as Trump has proposed slashing the US foreign aid and diplomacy budget by 28 percent.

In the US absence, Latin American and Caribbean countries contribute­d 55 percent of the total $317 million added to the MIF this year, while Japan pledged $85 million, the IDB said. During the last replenishm­ent in 2007, contributi­ons from Latin America and the Caribbean totaled 8 percent of the $501 million added to the fund. The United States contribute­d $150 million.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait