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4/11/2024

Remarks by Under Secretary for International Affairs Jay Shambaugh on the U.S. Vision for Global Debt and Developm…

Remarks by Under Secretary for International Affairs Jay
Shambaugh on the U.S. Vision for Global Debt and Development
Finance
April 11, 2024

As Prepared for Delivery
Thank you, Peter, for the kind introduction. And thank you to Adam Posen and the Peterson
Institute for International Economics for hosting me.
In September last year, I laid out the U.S. Treasury Departmentʼs views on how the IMF should
respond to the macroeconomic and long-term challenges faced by low- and middle-income
economies.
Today I want to widen the aperture and talk about our vision for how the international
financial system as a whole can and should be doing more to address these challenges,
particularly given this high-stakes moment for sustainable development.

LIQUIDIT Y AND DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES
I want to start with how the system ought to work: low- and middle-income countries
committed to ambitious development and sustainability goals – and pursuing sound
macroeconomic and sectoral policies – should be able to access financing for productive
investments without facing debt distress. We want such countries to develop domestic
resources and capital markets over time. Meanwhile, they should be able to invest in their
sustainable development at a pace faster than current domestic resources allow by drawing
net financing flows from the rest of the world. Their low current levels of capital and potential
for higher growth rates presents opportunities for global finance if fundamental policies and
governance are in line. This is especially critical given the scale of investments needed to
address cross-border challenges like climate change, pandemics and global health, and
fragility and conflict that can undermine and reverse hard fought development gains even in
the best-managed economies.
But too o en, we are seeing financial flows on net out of low- and middle-income countries,
with the burden of debt repayments exceeding new financing. Such net outflows from lowhttps://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2247

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and middle-income countries, particularly to o icial bilateral and private sources, are at multidecade highs. Per the World Bank, over 50 low-and middle-income countries experienced net
outflows [1] of public debt to o icial bilateral lenders over 2021 and 2022 – the largest such
group in nearly 20 years. These outflows are to emerging o icial lenders, even while Paris Club
financing has held steady in aggregate. Adding to this, nearly 70 low- and middle-income
countries experienced debt outflows to private creditors in 2022, the largest-ever group in
recorded data. Though IFI financing has surged to fill in the gaps, the net result is that almost
40 countries experienced external public debt outflows in 2022, including 14 from Africa. These
flows likely worsened in 2023, with for example no bond market access for Sub-Saharan
African countries last year. They could also continue to deteriorate over the next two to three
years – particularly given scheduled principal repayments to all creditors as a share of GDP
more than doubling for low-income countries in 2024 and 2025 relative to the average level
over 2010-2019, per IMF data.
It is not just that net flows are negative for some subset of countries. Overall flows to lowand middle-income countries have declined, something incongruous with the evident and
urgent needs to meet development and climate needs. Over the last two years, net debt
flows to developing countries fell by over 50 percent, to their lowest level in over a decade.
For the poorest countries that rely on o icial development assistance, net debt inflows in
2022 were almost 80 percent lower than their 2014 peak, close to their lowest recorded level.
This is not simply an issue of less money flowing in; more money is also flowing out of these
countries. As shares of both exports and revenues, external debt service has risen to levels
not seen in nearly two decades. This is despite the current level of outstanding sovereign
debt stock being well below prior peak levels. Public external debt service as a share of
revenue is now 14 percent for the median low-income country, over two and a half times
higher than a decade ago, and typically exceeds spending on health, education, and other
social programs by a substantial margin. This fiscal pressure is especially daunting against the
backdrop of the hundreds of billions in additional public financing needed to help low-income
countries make progress toward sustainable development goals over the coming years.
This is not to say that all low- and middle-income countries face that fact pattern. Some
countries have emerged from COVID shocks without a rise in debt distress and continue to
enjoy robust financing from both external and domestic sources. Others lack the governance,
reform commitments, or sustainable-development objectives to achieve progress.
Nevertheless, many countries operating in good faith are caught in these conditions with
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significant o icial bilateral and market debt and facing alarming tradeo s due to falling flows
and rising debt service.

VISION F OR COORDINAT ED ACT ION
This sobering and disturbing reality for developing countries is a generational challenge. And
like prior generational challenges in debt and development, it calls for the international
community to step up and take decisive, coordinated actions. We have the tools to meet the
moment, but we must strengthen and use them much more e ectively.
In response to that imperative, I would like to lay out today a vision for international finance
where all stakeholders are incentivized to sustain net positive flows to IMF- and MDBsupported countries who are doing the right things, pursuing responsible macroeconomic
policies, and prioritizing ambitious sustainable development goals.
This vision has three facets.
First, we need a pledge from o icial bilateral creditors to act in coordination to sustain high
quality, net positive flows to such countries. When the IMF and MDBs support countriesʼ
reforms and investment plans, Fund shareholders should not be withdrawing their own
financing. This does not necessitate haircuts for solvent countries, but rather a basic
expectation of refinancings or reprofilings, absent new liquid financing, increased grant flows,
or haircuts being applied. We should be enforcing and incentivizing these norms, including
through changes in IMF policy around lending into o icial arrears and financing assurances, as
I will discuss further.
Second, we need a way to help developing countries with significant external market debt
sustain private flows at a ordable terms and over longer time horizons. Private outflows
should not be netting against IFI support. Itʼs time to implement market incentives and
mechanisms at scale to mobilize lower-cost, longer-term, and shock-resistant private flows to
low- and middle-income sovereign borrowers with sound policy frameworks. We need this
both for traditional project finance and budgeted public investments.
Third, we need coordinated packages of support for countries that use newly expanded IFI
resources to sustain cross-IFI flows for debt sustainability and sustainable development in
smarter, integrated, and additive ways. This should be IFI-led and country-owned and use
new resources from facilities at the IMF, from the balance sheet optimization at the MDBs,
and from better use of existing pools of concessional finance, new Development Finance
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Institution (DFI) tools, and even philanthropic pools. It is important to pair flows with scaledup technical assistance in priorities like domestic resource mobilization and strengthening
investment climates.
I will discuss each of the key areas I mentioned – o icial bilateral sources, private sources, and
IFIs financing – in turn.
Before that, I want to note up front that realizing this vision depends on an IMF that is seen
as a credible steward of country programs – and of well-functioning restructurings for
borrowers that need it. Fund resources and policy must incentivize strong macroeconomic
and sectoral reforms that put countries on a viable path and unleash private flows, such as in
the recent case of Egypt. If programs are not rigorous and credible, countries can find
themselves worse o despite IFI inflows, and programs will not draw in private finance. By the
same token, while my focus today is on helping countries well before restructurings are
needed, we must also acknowledge that the sovereign debt architecture needs to be
delivering deeper and more timely restructurings – and doing so more consistently – than it
has been for many countries. We have seen progress on some country cases, and that is
important, but we must improve the Common Framework so we can more expeditiously
deliver debt treatment to countries in crisis.

NET POSIT IVE F LOW S F ROM OF F ICIAL B ILAT ERAL
SOURCES
O icial bilateral financing should reflect a norm that creditors coordinate multilaterally to
sustain financial flows to borrower countries that are steadfastly pursuing IMF- and MDBsupported reforms and investments. Historically, major creditors followed this norm. And yet,
we are seeing some emerging G20 creditors that do not follow this norm, with consequences
for global debt distress and sustainable development. For over 40 low- and middle-income
countries, cumulative net debt flows from Chinese creditors since 2019 are now negative.[2]
Almost all of these have had recent IMF programs.
All o icial bilateral creditors, particularly major IMF and World Bank shareholder creditor
countries, should pledge to act responsibly, providing durable financing that further
incentivizes and is commensurate with reform e orts by borrowers. No individual creditors
should be free-riding by pulling funds out of a country while it is implementing IMF- and MDBsupported reforms and other bilateral and multilateral creditors are refinancing or rolling over
funds, or injecting new resources.
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To be clear, reverting to low-quality o icial flows of recent years from some emerging
creditors is not the answer. Financing from o icial creditors, including that which IMF brings in
to fill program financing gaps, must be credible, transparent, and aligned with program goals.
Ultimately countries need strong macroeconomic fundamentals, hospitable business
environments, and sound practices in transparency and governance to unlock stable and
a ordable flows of financing, including private capital and domestic resources, and all o icial
financing needs to be aligned with that direction. This includes bilateral project finance, which
should also be transparent; opaque, extractive project finance and trade credits that help
lenders promote their own exports are not credible program support.
In the same vein, for many lower-income countries needing support, o icial bilateral flows
should more o en entail direct budget support, new grants, and concessional financing rather
than non-concessional loans in order to protect debt sustainability and free up public balance
sheets. For this reason, the United States, along with many other creditors, significantly
reduced loan exposures to developing countries following a wave of debt treatments in the
1980s and 1990s and has since transitioned to be a leading provider of grants to these
borrower countries. It would help if more emerging creditors made this shi . For example, The
United States has disbursed nearly $70 billion in aid to Sub-Saharan African countries over the
past five years – nearly seven times the net debt flows from all Chinese creditors and more
than half of the $130 billion in total net debt flows to sovereigns in the region. If the United
States had provided this financing as loans instead of grants, the U.S. would be the largest
bilateral creditor to the region by a substantial margin, and these countries would face even
higher debt servicing costs.
The international community should be prepared to enforce and incentivize norms around
o icial debt flows, including through IMF policy and comparability of treatment in
restructurings. In that spirit, I want to highlight IMF Board approval of the Fundʼs proposed
policy adjustments to its Lending into O icial Arrears Policy and to its financing assurances
reviews. These changes will not only allow the IMF to move faster with program financing to
debt-distressed countries – they are also a step toward aligning incentives for all o icial
bilateral creditors to participate responsibly with restructurings, reschedulings, or new liquid
finance to borrowing countries. Multilateral guidelines should likewise codify norms around
transparent, high quality o icial flows that are aligned with overall debt sustainability
objectives – such as the OECDʼs Sustainable Lending Practices and O icially Supported Export
Credits guidelines, to which the United States, including EXIM, is an adherent but key G20
emerging creditors are not.
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NET POSIT IVE F LOW S F ROM PRIVAT E CAPITAL
For developing countries with strong macro frameworks and development policy ambition–
specifically those with significant market debt – external private funds should not be flowing
out as IFI funds flow in. Spikes in debt service costs also draw public resources away from
immediate development priorities. MDBs and bilateral institutions have for many years
facilitated market financing for developing countries with the long tenors and stable outlook
needed for successful project finance. Itʼs time we do so at greater scale and also for publicly
budgeted sustainable-development investments. This means incentivizing external private
funds to “stay in” at attractive terms and provide immediate relief for sovereign borrowers
facing debt distress from sharp adjustments in external financing costs and availability.
We can help preserve market access with two underutilized features of sovereign debt and
development finance: credit enhancements and borrower protections. These features are
complementary to one another – and they are likewise complemented by ongoing private
capital mobilization initiatives for project finance, such as securitization and originate to
share approaches, that free up MDB balance sheets.
First, well-structured credit enhancements from MDBs and DFIs, such as loan guarantees, can
help flatten out the spikes in public debt service costs weʼve seen over the past two years.
They can also help procure longer-tenor financing and shi creditor composition to more
stable sources for long term development – both for public project finance and budgeted
investments. While they must be applied judiciously, given resource constraints and other
considerations, we can scale these in a targeted way for borrowers around debt amortization
walls without curtailing traditional concessional finance. While MIGA is already active in this
space with its non-honoring sovereign financial guarantee product, it has the balance sheet
space to do significantly more – including by using more inclusive credit-rating thresholds for
developing countries aligned with an IMF program and by increasing guarantee limits. The IDB
has been an innovator in this space by piloting a top-up in its volume of financial support for
sovereigns that pursue guarantees rather than loans, but more needs to be done, including
instilling the right incentives around opportunity-cost accounting and for sta to prioritize
deployment in their country engagement. All of this builds on momentum around scaled-up
guarantees for project finance from the launch of the World Bank Group Guarantee Platform
this summer.
Bilateral guarantees should also be aligned with and amplify these e orts for sovereign
borrowing around sustainable objectives, both for general public borrowing and publicly
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guaranteed project finance. When used in the right context and where funding is available,
bilateral guarantees can fill in the gaps le by exposure limits on MDB guarantees, free-up
lending for global challenges, and be deployed flexibly. For instance, bilaterally guaranteeing
risk held on MDBs' balance sheets, such as through sectoral initiatives at the ADB and IBRD[3]
around energy-transition lending, could achieve outsize leverage via MDB headroom. The
United States is actively exploring these tools as well as others from DFC, and we encourage
others to do so. I also want to highlight ongoing work by the U.S. DFC and MCC, to improve
and scale-up the use of credit enhancements to support issuance of debt-for-nature swaps
and sustainability-linked bonds in the Technical Taskforce established a er COP28 and other
forums.
Second, we should create safe harbors for countries seeking proactive relief from private debt
distress on a voluntary, market-aligned basis. Borrower countries should be able to
proactively sustain private flows through consensual, largely net present value neutral debt
treatments – including standstills, buybacks, and exchanges, where appropriate – without
su ering from rating downgrades and losing market access. To that end, the IMF, much like as
with collective-action clauses over recent decades, should play a leading role on developing
and promulgating contractual mechanisms like state-contingent standstill clauses to shield
sovereign borrowers collectively – without stigmatizing any individual borrower – from global
or regional changes in external private finance.
E orts underway at the World Bank, AfDB, EBRD, EIB, and IDB to incorporate climate-resilient
debt clauses into loan agreements are a starting point and should be paralleled in the private
loan and bond markets where possible – as well as in bilateral development finance and export
credit. IMF research indicates that collective-action clauses have benign e ects for sovereign
bond yields; the same could ultimately hold for well-structured state-contingent clauses.
For buybacks and exchanges, I likewise urge the IMFʼs and World Bankʼs Global Sovereign Debt
Roundtable to further engage credit rating agencies to address borrower countriesʼ concerns
about adverse impacts that disincentivize these transactions. “Debt-for-X” swaps or similar
transactions cannot substitute for comprehensive debt restructurings or other forms of relief,
but they can provide material private flows where conditions align, and the international
community should incentivize them being used more o en and more e ectively. In addition, in
key financial jurisdictions for sovereign debt, narrow, targeted updates that avoid market
disruptions – such indexing prejudgment interest rates to prevailing market rates – could help
further align incentives for net private flows.
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NET POSIT IVE F LOW S F ROM IF IS
I now want to turn to the opportunity we have to use the significantly expanded – and still
expanding – IFI resources to sustain IFI flows in a way that advances countriesʼ development
and sustainability ambitions. Todayʼs financing challenges would have likely been much worse
absent the extraordinary financing support that IFIs extended since the onset of the
pandemic. From 2020 to 2022, this collective support accounted for nearly 60 percent of the
total net debt inflows to developing countries. With the hundreds of billions in new IFI
capacity weʼve achieved through recent e orts from MDB Evolution and the implementation
of the G20 Capital Adequacy Framework report, we must work to have these resources come
together strategically and maximize impact.
It is di icult to overstate the scale of the opportunity with these additional IFI resources.
Take the IMF. The United States was a strong supporter of the 50% expansion in quota
resources that the IMF board approved last year. The Biden Administration is pleased that
Congress authorized the United States to lend $21 billion to support low-income countries
through concessional financing from the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT).
Building on that momentum, I would echo the call I made last fall for IMF members to further
support the PRGT by using future lending income to meet its subsidy needs. In addition, the
IMFʼs new Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) now has up to $40 billion of new lending
firepower focused on long-term financing for sustainability. The IMF Executive Board has
approved commitments so far of $8 billion to 18 countries, the majority of which is on track to
be disbursed by the end of the year. Formalizing the IMFʼs collaboration with the World Bank
and WHO so that RSF tackles risks associated with pandemics would deepen its impact.
The MDBs are likewise seeing historic expansions in financing resources, as a result of MDB
Evolution. We have made great progress on this front, particularly through implementation of
the G20 MDB Capital Adequacy Framework Review recommendations that are enabling $200
billion in additional financing capacity over the next ten years.
However, there is space to go even further, particularly around boosting concessional finance,
and we are seeing countries take action to this end. President Bidenʼs FY25 budget request
includes funds for a U.S. guarantee that would enable an additional $36 billion in World Bank
lending for addressing global challenges and a large U.S. contribution to trust funds and
financial intermediary funds. More broadly, the MDB Evolution initiative seeks to not only
expand the ability to lend by these institutions, but to make that lending more agile, more
e ective, and better channeled to solving cross-border challenges like climate, pandemics and
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global health, and fragility and conflict. Reforms around incentive structures and operational
approaches will make the enhanced lending capability even more impactful. The United States
has also been supportive of capital increases where capital is the binding constraint on
lending, for example at the EBRD and IDB Invest. MDB boards should periodically evaluate the
need for such investments by shareholders.
This is the moment to integrate these expanded IFI balance sheets with technical assistance
and cross-stakeholder leadership to make progress on debt sustainability and sustainable
development. This includes by unlocking new and high-demand concessional funding pools in
the climate-finance architecture, including the Climate Investment Funds, the Global
Environment Facility, and the Green Climate Fund. One opportunity will be in the
recommendations from the forthcoming G20 climate finance architecture independent review.
Other important sources of finance include the Pandemic Fund and Global Concessional
Financing Facility.
Another important opportunity to update the system is in the ongoing joint IMF and World
Bank comprehensive review of the Low-Income Countriesʼ Debt Sustainability Framework,
which should incorporate borrowersʼ sustainable finance considerations, including risk
adaptation and mitigation costs. This would build on enhancements that have been made for
the IMFʼs framework for Market Access Countries. But updating these tools is only impactful if
they are used e ectively. Consistent with my earlier call for credible IMF programs and
restructurings, I am calling on the Fund to ensure that debt relief envelopes and program
financing are commensurate with what countries need to pursue ambitious development and
sustainability goals.
Ultimately IFI flows should be aligned with country priorities, strategies, and plans that help
cultivate domestic resources and capital markets – the most durable flows for sustainable
development. Too o en, countries borrow externally and take on financing risks to cover fiscal
deficits that wouldnʼt exist if they collected domestic financial resources at the same rates as
developed economies. Domestic resource mobilization reforms can also bring in much needed
foreign currency, relieving balance of payments pressures with hard currency borrowing. The
U.S. Treasury, through our O ice of Technical Assistance, dispatches public financial
management experts to help governments around the world strengthen their ability to better
raise and manage domestic resources through improved revenue, budget, and debt
management. One such project in Angola generated fiscal flows of $125 million each year by
successfully helping to lower costs, reduce risk, and more e iciently manage sovereign debt.[4]
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In the same spirit, last year the World Bank dramatically expanded its support for domestic
resource mobilization reforms that will create fiscal space through both revenue policy and
administration measures, and addressing spending ine iciencies and harmful subsidies. We
would like to see other MDBs, in coordination with the World Bank, move in a similar
direction.

A CALL TO ACT ION
The international community has made significant progress in recent years with
strengthening tools across the IMF, the MDBs, multilateral trust funds, and DFIs to help
prevent debt distress from impeding developing countries investing ambitiously and
productively in sustainable development. If we use these tools in coordination across
stakeholders, and think expansively about their application, they can add up to something
much greater than the sum of their individual parts.
With such a process, a country committed to sound macro policy and sectoral policy ambition
for sustainable development would have the ability to responsibly invest in its needs. The IMF
and World Bank would re-establish a credible policy anchor and development path. O icial
creditors would pledge grants and concessional finance over the path, alongside funds from
other MDBs, maximizing the impact of IFI flows. Private funds would likewise stay in, in some
cases due to MDB and other credit enhancements, so that IFI funds would not merely
refinance private debts. High quality project finance from MDBs, DFIs, trust funds, and exportcredit agencies would complement general-budget flows by funding public projects and
private balance sheets. Financing conditionality would be tied to technical assistance to drive
reforms that mobilize domestic resources. The goal would be to maximize external and
domestic resources to help li up countries making productive, ambitious investments.
There are a number of countries who are doing the right things with their macro and
development policies – including doing their part to address in ambitious ways the climate,
pandemic and global health, and fragility and conflict challenges Iʼve alluded to today – but
are facing significant debt amortizations in the next 24 months. The international community
must make sure that the international financial system is there for these countries.
All stakeholders will find the United States an enthusiastic partner and leader in realizing this
vision. Thank you.
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[1] Disbursements net of principal repayments.
[2] Aggregates o icial bilateral and private creditors from China.
[3] Innovative Finance for Climate in Asia Pacific and Just Energy Transition Partnership guarantees, respectively.
[4] Projected through life of the bonds issued in 2022 under improved liability management.

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