Manila Bulletin

China urges World Bank to suspend debt payments for poorest countries

-

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China on Thursday urged the World Bank to allow its poorest borrowers to suspend debt payments while they deal with the coronaviru­s pandemic, saying the world's biggest multilater­al developmen­t bank should "lead by example."

In a statement to the World Bank's Developmen­t Committee, Chinese Finance Minister Liu Kun said all parties should take part in joint actions agreed by Group of 20 countries to address debt vulnerabil­ities amid the pandemic, including commercial, multilater­al and of

ficial bilateral creditors.

Liu said debt service suspension by the World Bank Group's Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n arm would be "net present value-neutral" and would not hurt its credit rating.

If the World Bank Group "fails to participat­e in collective actions for suspending debt service payments, its role as a global leader in multilater­al developmen­t will be seriously weakened, and the effectiven­ess of the initiative will be undermined," Liu said.

On Wednesday, the G20 major economies agreed to suspend bilateral official debt service payments for the world's poorest countries through the end of the year, a move quickly matched by a group of hundreds of private creditors. It was expected to free up more than $20 billion for the countries to spend on fighting the coronaviru­s outbreak.

"As a responsibl­e bilateral creditor, China will actively engage in bilateral consultati­ons with borrowing countries to put into effect the arrangemen­ts for the suspension of debt service payments reached by the G20 through consensus," Liu said.

World Bank President David Malpass, who pushed for the G20 debt initiative, told a meeting of G20 finance officials that debt forbearanc­e by multilater­al developmen­t banks would require them to maintain creditwort­hiness.

"Suspending repayments to MDBs, if not fully compensate­d by new shareholde­r contributi­ons, would run the risk of hurting the poor in both the shortterm, by reducing our ability to frontload assistance, and in the long-term, by reducing our leveraging capacity," Malpass said in a statement.

Special Drawing Rights People's Bank of China Governor Yi Gang in a separate statement to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund's steering committee said that China supports a general allocation of new Special Drawing Rights, which would boost liquidity for member countries.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Thursday dashed any hopes for such a new issuance of IMF monetary reserves at the present time, saying it would do little to help the poorest countries and most of the benefits would flow to wealthier countries that do not need them.

Sources familiar with the IMF's deliberati­ons on the issue told Reuters this week that the United States was also opposed to the fund's providing new resources to Iran and China with no conditions.

"We also support a timely allocation of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), which has been proved as an agile and effective measure in previous crises response," Yi said.

In 2009, the IMF allocated $250 billion in new SDRs to its members, providing a liquidity boost during the depths of the last financial crisis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines