Viet Nam News

A climate-aligned IMF? Question is, what exactly would that look like?

- ❱ Mohamed Nasheed & Mohan* PROJECT SYNDICATE

Last week, the board of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund approved current Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva for another five-year term. It is a welcome developmen­t that comes at a critical moment. Her second term will finish just before the end of this “make-or-break” decade for reining in climate change and delivering on the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Georgieva has made significan­t progress in aligning the IMF with these goals. She was instrument­al in the IMF’S decision to acknowledg­e climate change as a critical macro issue under its institutio­nal mandate. Under her leadership, the IMF launched its first-ever climate-change strategy; created the Resilience and Sustainabi­lity Trust (RST), its primary climate-finance instrument; and fostered global dialogue on the issue through its flagship publicatio­ns and research.

But now even bolder leadership is needed. As the only multilater­al institutio­n charged with maintainin­g global financial and fiscal stability, the IMF’S role is critical for addressing climate change. Georgieva can build on the progress made in her first term by doing four things: committing the IMF to align with the Paris agreement; ensuring that it has ample financial firepower; elevating the voices of climate-vulnerable emerging-market and developing economies (EMDES); and mobilising internatio­nal support for climate mitigation and adaptation efforts.

The first task is the most important. All the IMF’S programmes – not just those that are explicitly climate focused, like the RST – need to start promoting low-carbon developmen­t. Critically, that means avoiding scenarios that lock in fossil-fuel-intensive growth paths that will leave countries stranded in a net-zero future. All the IMF’S work must be consistent with models of inclusive growth and developmen­t, including those where value is generated from natural capital and biodiversi­ty. Equally, the IMF’S surveillan­ce efforts (which involve all countries, not just borrowers) should help government­s identify how best to achieve their developmen­t and climate goals.

But aligning IMF financing and operations with the Paris goals will not be enough. With government­s negotiatin­g a new climate-finance goal this year, the IMF should help policymake­rs identify potential sources of financing and better understand the macroecono­mic dimensions of the issue. This will require fresh thinking, because the evidence shows that carbon pricing will not be enough to generate the resources needed to support the net-zero transition. Robust analytics from the IMF can help to foster a global consensus on how best to generate internatio­nal and domestic public finance – whether through taxation, revenue from carbon border adjustment mechanisms, or other channels.

Second, Georgieva must ensure that the IMF itself has ample financing firepower. As she has previously warned, the world is increasing­ly prone to a wide range of shocks, many of which would have profound macroecono­mic consequenc­es. In this fraught new setting, the IMF’S operations and balance sheet must be calibrated against what member states need to remain resilient. While the IMF Board approved a 50 per cent increase in member states quotas (contributi­ons) last December, that is far below the 267 per cent increase required to meet the gross external financing needs of the most vulnerable members.

Similarly, the transition to net-zero will radically alter the economic terrain for many countries, especially those that have long relied on exporting or taxing fossil fuels. The IMF should track these trends and prepare to support countries that need help pursuing an orderly, low-carbon transition.

Third, Georgieva has a special responsibi­lity to ensure that climate-vulnerable economies are involved in the IMF’S decision-making. These economies are more likely to seek IMF help, so it is all the more important that they have a say in how the IMF works. Yet, as of October 2022, the Vulnerable Group of 20 (V20) commands only around 5 per cent of the voting power at the IMF, despite being home to 17 per cent of the world’s population.

One major V20 demand is to “make debt work for the climate.” That means revising the IMF’S debt-sustainabi­lity model to incorporat­e urgent investment and spending needs, and to determine what it will take for each country to meet them. Implicit in this approach is a move away from convention­al austerity-based measures, and toward strategies focused more on resource mobilisati­on.

To be sure, the recent addition of a third African chair on the IMF Executive Board was a welcome developmen­t. But at the end of the day, last year’s 16th General Review of Quotas was a missed opportunit­y to rebalance voting power. Given that the IMF has never had a non-european managing director, it will take fundamenta­l governance reforms to convince climate-vulnerable economies that it truly represents their interests. To that end, Georgieva should offer her support for ongoing efforts to recognise the V20 as an official inter-government­al group at the IMF.

Finally, since Georgieva cannot undertake these efforts alone, the IMF Board must support her in hiring and funding additional staff from diverse discipline­s and background­s. Additional resources would allow the IMF to scale up its direct country engagement and ensure that national policies are tailored to local contexts. Coordinati­on with other internatio­nal institutio­ns is also essential. The World Bank, for example, can help leverage the RST’S limited resources to mobilise more money, especially toward resiliency programmes like Climate Prosperity Plans.

In her first term, Georgieva won the argument that climate change is central to the IMF’S mandate. Now, she will have to show that the institutio­n can rise to the challenge posed by the climate crisis at this “now or never” juncture.

* Mohamed Nasheed, a former president of the Maldives, is Founder and Secretary-general of the Climate Vulnerable Forum. Rakesh Mohan, a former deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India, is a member of the Economic Advisory Panel to the World Bank President Ajay Banga, President Emeritus of the Centre for Social and Economic Progress, and a member of the Task Force on Climate, Developmen­t, and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Vietnam