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10/15/2021

Statement from Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen for the Joint IMFC and Development Committee | U.S. Depa…

Statement from Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen for the
Joint IMFC and Development Committee
October 14, 2021

WASHINGTON – The COVID-19 pandemic again overshadows the Annual Meetings of the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank, continuing to exact its human and economic
toll on our communities. I share the grief of those who have lost family and friends. New
COVID variants heighten risks and threaten to exacerbate the already divergent economic
recovery underway. We indeed face tough global challenges ahead, and the best way forward
is working together.
The U.S. economy has surpassed its pre-pandemic level bolstered by substantial fiscal and
monetary policy support and early vaccination e orts. The American Rescue Plan, passed
earlier this year, continues to provide support for families and businesses struggling with the
impact of the pandemic. Major economies have a tremendous opportunity to utilize their
fiscal space to continue to support their economies through the uncertainty of the
pandemic. We also have an opportunity to foster a greener, more inclusive, more resilient
recovery. To this end, the Biden Administration is now advancing a broad agenda to make
significant investments in our infrastructure, human capital, clean energy, housing, and
healthcare to strengthen our economy and address longstanding structural challenges.
We must intensify our e orts to increase the pace of vaccinations and the deployment of lifesaving therapeutics to truly halt this pandemic. The United States is playing its part in
addressing the immediate health impact of the pandemic by sharing over 180 million vaccine
doses and committing to provide over 1.1 billion doses by the end of 2022. The Biden
Administration has also been supportive of e orts to strengthen global pandemic
preparedness. We support the establishment of a Global Health and Finance Board to create
a regular forum for health and finance policymakers to coordinate actions in monitoring and
responding to future health threats that pose a significant global risk. In addition, we
support the establishment of a Financial Intermediary Fund, or FIF, housed at the World
Bank, to provide dedicated financing for investments to prevent, detect, and prepare for
future health threats, and catalyze disease surveillance and improved health system
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10/15/2021

Statement from Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen for the Joint IMFC and Development Committee | U.S. Depa…

capacities. A FIF could also have flexibility to provide direct support to a variety of
implementing partners, which may not be eligible for financing through existing
mechanisms.
In addition to over $250 billion in financial support, the World Bank and the IMF partnered
with key multilateral organizations to establish the Multilateral Leaders Task Force on
COVID-19 (MLTF) to provide key data and address bottlenecks in global vaccine availability
and delivery. The MLTF has a strong role to play in stepping up our collective pandemic
response, including by helping countries get ready to take delivery of increasing amounts of
vaccines in the months ahead and are prepared to get shots in arms.
As the crisis continues, the leadership, coordination, and innovation of the World Bank and
the IMF will be vital for a successful and durable recovery. A er the International
Development Association (IDA) stepped up its financing and frontloaded resources over the
past year, the United States, other donors, and Management advanced the IDA-20
replenishment by one year. In IDA-20, I encourage World Bank leadership to support IDA
countries in enhancing investments to address crisis and pandemic preparedness, increasing
debt vulnerabilities, and inclusion for all, including women, girls, and LGBTQIA+ people. At a
time when shareholders face significant competing demands, reforms associated with the
2018 Capital Package allowed the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD) and International Finance Corporation (IFC) to stretch their financial capacity,
underscoring their value. It is critical that the World Bank continue to manage its resources
prudently, judiciously allocating resources to those countries that need it the most while
implementing its graduation policy.
The IMF has already taken steps to build on the emergency support it provided to members
since the beginning of the pandemic, with the new SDR allocation providing additional
liquidity for countries to bolster reserves and fight the ongoing crisis. The IMF should work
diligently to advise members on how best to use their new SDR resources responsibly and
transparently. To amplify the benefits of the SDR allocation for low-income and other
vulnerable countries, economies with the ability to do so should channel some of their SDRs
to those countries that need them most through both the Poverty Reduction and Growth
Trust (PRGT) and a new Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST) at the IMF.
The RST will be an important step to support vulnerable countries undergoing structural
transformations that will strengthen public health systems and create more sustainable,
low-emission and climate resilient economies. To make the RST e ective, the IMF will need
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10/15/2021

Statement from Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen for the Joint IMFC and Development Committee | U.S. Depa…

to work closely with the World Bank to leverage the Bank’s subject matter expertise when
designing health and climate policy conditionality. IMF Governors should take this moment
to voice our strong support for establishing the RST at the IMF and call on the IMF and World
Bank to work hand in hand on making the RST an e ective tool to support sustainable,
medium-term growth.
Going forward, both the World Bank and the IMF will need to strengthen policies and
practices to help address debt vulnerabilities. Additional IMF lending through vehicles like
the PRGT and the RST will require robust debt sustainability analyses to underpin the
necessary adjustments countries will have to make. The World Bank should also pursue
further innovations to improve and increase creditor transparency and work with clients to
publish better debt data as part of its implementation of the Sustainable Development
Finance Policy.
The international community will also need to rea irm its existing commitments to support
debt sustainability in poor and vulnerable countries. Over the past year and a half, the United
States has coordinated with other G20 members to develop and implement the Debt
Sustainability Suspension Initiative (DSSI), to help the poorest countries respond to the
pandemic, and the Common Framework to reduce debt vulnerabilities. Swi action in
responding to Common Framework requests is necessary to help low-income countries
restore debt sustainability. To that end, I call on all o icial bilateral creditors to participate
constructively in debt restructuring processes, including by providing timely financing
assurances.
Climate is an existential threat and one that requires a global response commensurate with
the size of the challenge. This is an important year for climate as countries gather next
month in Glasgow to raise our collective global ambition. In the lead up to COP-26, the Biden
Administration is redoubling our pledge to provide international climate finance and
encouraging strong action on climate through the international system. I commend the IMF
for its e orts to incorporate climate into its engagement with countries, including potential
lending through the RST and integration of climate resilience and adaptation into its
surveillance assessments. The World Bank, as well as other Multilateral Development Banks
(MDBs) need to be at the forefront of high-impact operations that have a significant e ect on
reducing country emissions, protecting critical ecosystems, and building resilience against
the impacts of climate change.

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10/15/2021

Statement from Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen for the Joint IMFC and Development Committee | U.S. Depa…

We welcome the recently revised Climate Change Action Plan (CCAP) and the World Bank
Group’s increased climate finance targets and look forward to additional progress. In
particular the World Bank Group should demonstrate leadership through minimizing
support for fossil fuel investments while increasing energy access, and fully and urgently
aligning its activities with the goals of the Paris Agreement. As a top priority for accelerating
the transition to net zero, the World Bank Group should focus on further ways to mobilize
private capital for climate-aligned and sustainable investment, and assist developing
countries in creating an enabling environment for climate-friendly finance. For this reason, I
call on the World Bank Group to cra a plan to double its mobilized private climate finance
by 2025. I ask the other MDBs to do the same.
As we continue to work together on tackling climate change through diversifying global
energy supply, we will need to address the problem of forced labor in the solar supply chain.
This is why the United States has taken strong action to prevent the import of products that
depend upon forced labor. This involves working with the World Bank and the other MDBs to
keep forced labor out of MDB-funded projects, strengthening procurement practices social
safeguard policies, and enhancing traceability and verification regimes.
Finally, addressing the significant challenges facing the global economy requires collective
action through multilateral approaches, and the United States is fully committed to the
multilateral system. Results of the investigations into Doing Business irregularities could
reduce confidence in the international financial institutions if there is not strong action to
boost accountability, protect data integrity, and prevent misconduct. It is also important that
international financial institutions consider ways to enhance internal systems for
whistleblowing and whistleblower protections. The United States will monitor
developments closely and evaluate any new facts and findings should they become
available.
I look forward to the opportunity to use these Annual Meetings to advance discussions and
initiatives in pursuit of a stronger, sustainable, and more inclusive global economy.

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