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7/15/2022

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at G20 High Level Seminar on Strengthening Global Collaboratio…

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at G20 High
Level Seminar on Strengthening Global Collaboration for
Tackling Food Insecurity
July 15, 2022

As Prepared for Delivery
I thank the Indonesian Presidency for convening this seminar.
We are meeting at an extremely di icult time for global food security, which was already
under pressure from conflict, climate change, and economic shocks associated with COVID-19.
Now, Russiaʼs war against Ukraine has exacerbated those challenges and led to a global crisis
of food insecurity as prices spiked for food, fertilizer, and fuel. Putinʼs actions, including the
destruction of agricultural facilities, the of grain and farm equipment, and the e ective
blockade of Black Sea ports, amount to using food as a weapon of war.
Those most directly impacted are the poorest households in the poorest countries. Families
that already spend a disproportionate share of their income on food are forced to make stark
choices. Low-income countries that already face severe fiscal constraints struggle to import
enough food and fertilizer and to provide even the most basic social safety net to their
people. These e ects are setting back development and undermining e orts to eradicate
poverty.
We must take action to address the short-term food insecurity crisis and, equally importantly,
the longer-term drivers of food insecurity, including the nexus with climate change. The
speed and wisdom of our decisions now will make the di erence on whether we get the
current crisis under control.
The G20 must work together to tackle these challenges and protect vulnerable families from
the threat of hunger today and tomorrow. Let me suggest three lines of e ort:
First, we G20 countries must set the example and call on others to avoid counterproductive
policy responses such as export restrictions and stockpiling, which distort markets and further
drive-up prices. Equally, governments should tailor fiscal responses to those most in need,
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at G20 High Level Seminar on Strengthening Global Collaboratio…

leveraging digital tools where possible to carefully target support for vulnerable households
rather than employing blanket subsidies that are regressive and costly.
Second, we must leverage the existing food security and agriculture architecture to the
maximum. The multilateral development banks (MDBs), the Rome-based food agencies
(including IFAD), the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program (GAFSP), the IMF, and the
WTO all have roles to play.
For example, I met with the heads of the International Financial Institutions on this important
issue, and they responded in May with the IFI Action Plan to Address Food Insecurity. We
must continue to encourage these institutions to step up and surge their response to the
crisis with urgency and to implement their commitments as outlined in the Action Plan. I was
also pleased with the strong outcomes on food security at the WTOʼs 12 Ministerial
Conference. Thank you, Ngozi.
We donʼt need new institutions. We need robust coordination, knowledge sharing, research
and development, financing, and action. In this respect, the Global Alliance for Food Security
is helpful.
And I further propose that G20 deputies consider how to enhance cooperation between G20
finance ministries and the relevant other authorities, including by improving data
transparency.
Third, G20 countries must take steps to provide financial assistance. For our part, the U.S.
announced last month that we are committing a further $2.76 billion to tackling food
insecurity, on top of $2.8 billion already provided since Russiaʼs invasion of Ukraine. We are
also providing $500 million for the EBRDʼs Resilience and Livelihood Framework to support
food and energy security and $155 million to GAFSP. We will also be contributing to the
African Development Bankʼs African Emergency Food Production Facility and IFADʼs Crisis
Response Initiative.
Much more work remains to eliminate hunger and poverty beyond responding to the current
crisis. I look forward to continuing our engagement with partners in the G20, International
Financial Institutions, and other International Organizations.
Thank you.
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