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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Joint IMFC and Development Committee Statement by
Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen
October 13, 2022

The United States remains resolute in its condemnation of Russiaʼs illegal war against
Ukraine, which violates international norms and the core tenets of the United Nations
Charter. We urge Russia to immediately end this needless war. We stand with the Ukrainian
people and their government against Russiaʼs aggression and fraudulent attempts to annex
parts of Ukraine. We continue to provide critical military and economic support to Ukraine in
cooperation with bilateral and multilateral partners. This economic support includes debt
service suspension from Ukraineʼs Group of Creditors through 2023, alongside financing from
international financial institutions (IFIs) and direct bilateral aid. While the Ukrainian people
pay the highest price, Russiaʼs actions also place immense pressure on a global economy still
recovering from the scarring e�ects of the COVID-19 pandemic and on people well beyond
Europeʼs shores. The IMF and World Bank play unique roles in helping countries around the
world respond to these shocks while collaborating to provide unprecedented financing.
The global economy was already dealing with supply and demand imbalances and elevated
inflation prior to this war. The spillovers from Russiaʼs war against Ukraine have increased
food, fertilizer, and energy prices; further elevating inflation and increasing food insecurity in
many countries. A price cap on Russian oil exports will help support stable energy prices and
a steady flow of oil to energy markets in the short term.
The challenges facing us are di�icult and diverse. For many of us inflation is the key
challenge, while some face both rising inflation and weakening growth, and others are
bu�eted by tighter financing conditions and rising debt. Our appropriately di�erent policies
at this time are also contributing to currency movements that can cause spillovers and
struggles in other countries. While our policies may di�er, we must all aim at our shared goal
of strong, sustainable, balanced, and inclusive growth.
It is critical that IFIs provide tailored policy advice and targeted financing and technical
support, alongside capacity development, to support low-income countries facing spillovers

from Russiaʼs war, the COVID-19 pandemic, and other shocks. To this end, I welcome
continued e�orts to further finance the IMFʼs Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT).
The United States recently contributed $70 million to the PRGTʼs subsidy reserve account,
and the Biden Administration continues to work with our Congress to lend up to $21 billion
to the PRGT and the Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST). I strongly support the IMFʼs
work to operationalize the RST by the end of this year, including the health window, and urge
continued collaboration with the World Bank on the careful design of its conditions.
We are seeing a sharp rise in risks of debt distress among developing and emerging market
economies. I urge the IMF and World Bank to strengthen their collaboration on debt-related
e�orts, including promoting transparency and best practices around complex types of
borrowing such as collateralized debt. I am concerned by the slow progress in resolving the
first cases under the Common Framework. All creditors need to commit to improving the
process, starting by concluding debt treatments for Chad and Zambia by the end of this year.
We should also consider expanding the Common Framework to include middle-income
countries. The long established and respected principle of preferred creditor status is critical
to the IFIsʼ strong and steady support for low-income countries, especially during crises. All
shareholders must respect this principle. I also encourage the World Bank to continue
making progress on the implementation of the Sustainable Development Financing Policy to
incentivize International Development Association-eligible countries to move toward
transparent and sustainable financing.
As other challenges push health issues from the forefront, we should not forget that public
health crises will remain an ongoing threat. In this regard, I urge the World Bank Group (WBG)
to continue their e�orts, alongside the private sector, to scale up multilateral support for the
production, acquisition, and delivery of vaccines in Africa. I also welcome the launch of the
Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness, and Response Financial Intermediary Fund (FIF) at the
World Bank, with the partnership of the World Health Organization and broad support of the
G20. The United States looks forward to the FIFʼs first call for proposals to finance
investments in developing countries that strengthen prevention, preparedness, and
response capabilities for COVID-19 and future pandemics. The establishment of the FIF is a
good example of the intensive collaboration between finance and health authorities that the
G20 initiated through the Joint Finance-Health Task Force.
We must also work together to address other global challenges. We need collective action to
address food insecurity by increasing the supply of food worldwide and committing to its

free movement across the globe. I welcome the steps the IFIs have taken to alleviate the
su�ering of the poorest and most vulnerable, including the IMF Executive Boardʼs recent
approval of a new emergency food shock window, which will be available immediately to
help countries address food security challenges. I also welcome the World Bank's $30 billion
program to address immediate needs, as well as longer-term challenges, including by
helping countries invest in sustainable agricultural and water conservation practices. To
enhance resilience to future shocks, we need to work now to help communities build longterm resilience in the face of climate change.
Climate change is a shared, existential challenge. Our individual actions have important
spillovers around the world. The Inflation Reduction Act places the United States on track to
reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent by the end of the decade. I recognize that
every countryʼs transition pathway will vary, and I urge others to implement climate policies
to accelerate a just energy transition, while increasing energy access. The United States is
also partnering with a few emerging market countries committed to bringing significant
levels of public and private finance to shi� away from greenhouse gas-intensive energy
sources toward renewables. It is important that the World Bank lead in the global energy
transition by providing sound analysis to inform countries of climate-related macroeconomic
risks and support countries as they look to mitigate and adapt to the e�ects of climate
change.
To this end, the WBG should more e�ectively deploy its convening and financing role to
advance climate goals and integrate adaptation and resilience across all its lines of e�ort,
while also making progress to align its operations to the Paris Agreement. I welcome the
progress the WBG has made with its Country Climate and Development Reports, which will
help countries define and move their climate agendas forward, and applaud exceeding the
35% climate finance target. To meaningfully address the climate crisis, the private sector
must play a key role in providing bold investments in high-quality sustainable infrastructure
that supports an economic shi� aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement. I expect the
WBG to lead in the design and delivery of solutions to mobilize private capital focused on
high-quality sustainable infrastructure.
Many of the biggest challenges we face cross boundaries and disproportionately a�ect the
poorest and most vulnerable populations. No one country can successfully tackle challenges
like climate change, pandemics, or fragility and conflict in isolation, yet it is necessary to
address them to improve the outlook and catalyze sustainable development in all

development countries. However, our existing multilateral development finance architecture
was not designed to address these types of cross-border challenges. It was designed for
projects where the benefits chiefly accrued to the country that was borrowing for the project.
Today, we must be able to invest in projects where the benefits are di�use. When countries
take action on these global challenges, the benefits spill over to the entire world. The global
community has a responsibility to help fund action where the benefits are global. It cannot
rely only on developing countries to borrow at usual rates to fund these activities.
For this reason, I call on the WBG to explore areas of reform to its vision, incentives,
operational approach, and financial model to better respond to global challenges, while
retaining its focus on the twin goals of poverty reduction and shared prosperity. I ask WBG
Management to identify gaps in the WBGʼs current institutional and operational framework,
and within the context of the international development finance architecture, deliver a
roadmap by year-end for consideration by the World Bank Executive Board. The roadmap
should include proposals to strengthen the WBGʼs role and capacity to address global
challenges, including by mobilizing private capital and domestic resources; incentivize
country demand and the e�ective use of WBG financing for global challenges; contribute to
strengthening coordination and collaboration across the broader international financial
architecture; and design pertinent financial reforms to make the most e�icient use of the
WBGʼs balance sheet and generate new resources. To this end, I strongly encourage WBG
Management to draw from the G20 Independent Review of MDB Capital Adequacy
Frameworks which will also help safeguard the WBGʼs long-term financial sustainability,
robust credit ratings, and preferred creditor status.
Strong governance and accountability serve as the foundation of the World Bank and IMF.
These institutions must continue to espouse the principles and standards they ask of their
members. I encourage World Bank Management to continue its e�orts to instill trust in its
workforce and strengthen the Bankʼs reputation as a respectful, well-governed, inclusive,
and e�ective workplace. I welcome the IMFʼs implementation of recommendations from its
review of institutional safeguards, and look forward to the review of the IMFʼs framework for
addressing country governance issues in its surveillance and lending programs. Promoting
diversity at the IMF and World Bank is critical to these institutionsʼ e�ectiveness and
sustainability. I welcome the recent approval of the Fundʼs gender strategy to bolster
diversity and inclusion, and call on Governors to take steps to promote gender diversity at
the IMF and World Bank Executive Boards.

Finally, in the face of the overlapping challenges in front of us, I want to thank the sta� at the
IFIs, as well as my sta�, for their tireless public service to push forward an agenda which will
provide much needed support to those su�ering globally and place the global economy on
surer footing. Without their e�orts, none of this would be possible.