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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Statement by the Temporary Alternate Governor for the United
States of America Alexia Latortue, 2022 Annual Meetings of the
Boards of Governors of the Inter-American Development Bank
and Inter-American Investment Corporation
March 29, 2022

On behalf of the Treasury Department, I would like to thank Finance Minister Restrepo and
his team for their leadership and e�ective work in preparing for the decisions to be taken by
Governors at this meeting. We congratulate Finance Minister Clarke for his election as Chair
for these Annual Meetings and additional work that may take the time of Governors in the
year to come. We are hopeful that the Governors of the IDB Group will be able to come
together in person at our next meeting in Panama. I would also like to thank the sta� of the
IDB Group for their continued support of the aspirations of the people of Latin America and
the Caribbean for a better future. We recognize and applaud the e�orts of all sta�, at a time
when more was demanded of them at work, while they were also dealing with the
consequences of the pandemic at home.

The Biden-Harris Administration has made strong partnerships with Latin America and the
Caribbean a United States foreign policy priority and eagerly looks forward to partnering
with the region through Build Back Better World (B3W), the U.S. contribution to the global
quality infrastructure initiative announced by President Biden and G7 Leaders at their June
2021 summit. B3W will focus on mobilizing private capital to fund values-driven, highstandard, and transparent infrastructure in low- and middle-income countries in four focal
areas: climate, health and health security, digital technology, and gender equity and
equality.

President Biden will welcome our hemispheric leaders to Los Angeles the week of June 6 for
the Ninth Summit of the Americas so that together we might meet our regionʼs challenges
and together build a sustainable, resilient, and equitable future for our nations and our

citizens.

We stand ready to work with you to support strong, sustainable, and inclusive economic
growth undergirded by commitments to democracy, equality, transparency, anti-corruption,
and the rule of law.

REGIONAL ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS
Many countries in the region have rebounded strongly from the human and economic
devastation of the pandemic. According to early estimates, growth reached 6.8% in 2021.
Many countries have surpassed pre-pandemic levels of production. For the region that
experienced the sharpest contraction during the pandemic, this is no small feat.

But the challenges for the region remain daunting. Per capita income will likely not return to
pre-pandemic levels until 2023, inflation is above 8% and climbing, and the number of
people living in poverty grew by 25 million. Gross government debt is 5 percentage points
higher than prior to the pandemic. Many in the region were tightening macroeconomic
policies to contain inflation and return to sustainable fiscal positions. These policies may
prove politically challenging for many, especially given the pent-up demand for better
economic outcomes, stronger governance, and more e�ective delivery of public goods that
predated the pandemic.

Added to this very complicated outlook is Russiaʼs unprovoked war on Ukraine. Some
borrowing member countries of the IDB Group will experience a positive terms of trade
shock, but many are now faced by external pressure resulting from higher food and fuel
prices. There will certainly be inflationary pressure. Once again, Caribbean nations will be
disproportionately a�ected by a global economic shock given their reliance on foreign trade.

The resulting economic strain may lead people to search for opportunity elsewhere. The
Biden-Harris Administration has begun implementing its Root Causes Strategy to help stem

irregular migration from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. We look forward to working
with the IDB Group and our partners in the region to promote an integrated regional
response framework. We strongly encourage the IDB to engage with countries that are
hosting migrant populations, and whose own citizens are facing emigration pressure, to
enact policies that permit the private sector to generate employment and incomes.

THE IDB GROUP AS A LEADER IN CLIMATE CHANGE
The IDB Group plays a key role in assisting member countries to adapt to the impacts of
climate change in the region – assistance that is particularly essential for countries that are
highly vulnerable, such as the small island developing states. Climate resilience and
adaptation investments are critical for sustainable long-term growth, yet the level of
investments remains insu�icient because of lower growth multipliers. Too many in the
region see economic output negatively impacted by increasingly frequent and severe natural
disasters. Limiting the economic fallout of these events through resilient project investment
based on the best-available data is an imperative.
We also see a tremendous opportunity for the IDB Group to lead in protecting global carbon
sinks. We look forward to engaging with the IDB Group and countries in the region to devise
optimal ways to combat the climate crisis, while nurturing sustainable livelihoods for those
in and around the Amazon. The Amazon is critically important for its rich biodiversity,
capacity to store carbon dioxide, and important role in sustaining the hemisphereʼs rainwater
cycle.

The IDB Group also has a key role to play in helping Latin American and Caribbean
economies transition away from carbon-intensive fossil fuels. The Bank can invest in more
diversified energy systems, and bolster electricity transmission systems to support more
renewables. The IDB Group can also assist regional partners in catalyzing private investment
and help to diversify the economies of those reliant on fossil fuel-intensive extractive
industries.

We are now seeing firsthand the long-term vulnerability that comes from relying too heavily

on external sources of energy commodities – both from a price volatility and security of
supply standpoint. This highlights the long-term advantages that renewables can o�er, the
need to catalyze the electrification of more sectors, and to catalyze the deployment of new
low-carbon technologies in the market.

The IDB Group can do more to support the regionʼs e�orts towards transport electrification
and green bond market development, particularly by helping to deploy newer technologies
like green hydrogen and battery storage.

INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK GROUP
When we convened last year, Governors asked the IDB Group to analyze the many
development challenges facing the region, including the COVID-19 pandemic, climate
change, natural disasters, and the structural challenges that preceded the pandemic. The
depth of the crisis facing the region was clear, and we applaud the very strong e�orts from
the IDB Invest to support their clients and to provide critical financing to the private sector
during the economic collapse. For the IDB, we supported the temporary increase in the
ceiling on budget lending. It is a testament to the strength of the IDBʼs balance sheet that the
IDB could play a very significant role to assist countries that faced unexpectedly large deficits
during the pandemic. The IDBʼs robust response a�irms the prudent decisions that
Governors have made throughout the years to strengthen the institutionʼs financial
management framework. We are pleased to see that the IDB continues to have the ability to
deliver substantial financial support to the region.

We believe that the analytic work has delivered on the tasks mandated by Governors in the
Barranquilla Resolution. We find the analytical workʼs emphasis on the role of the private
sector and the need to address climate change for the regionʼs future development
appropriate.

In 2015, the rationale for merging out the IDBʼs support for the private sector to a newly
strengthened IDB Invest was the recognition that the private sector will be the engine of Latin
Americaʼs future growth, and vital to catalyzing the necessary resources for investment in

high-quality infrastructure. The experience of the pandemic, and the di�icult environment
that now faces the region, confirms that vision. Investments in climate, health, digital
technology, social protection, and gender equity and equality will connect people with
opportunities and contribute to both economic growth and greater social inclusion.
However, these investments will only flourish if the region embraces an ambitious program
of systemic and structural reforms, and if the public sector works in partnership with private
enterprise to address the impediments to private sector led growth throughout the region.

The analytic work outlined an ambitious new value proposition for the IDB Group to enhance
its development e�ectiveness in support of a private-sector led recovery that dovetails with
the Biden-Harris Administrationʼs B3W initiative. We see great potential in exploring a new
vision and business model for a reinforced IDB Invest that aims to increase impact, mobilize
more private capital to the region, and support growth-enhancing investments.

We believe that a renewed investment in IDB Invest, accompanied by operational and
institutional reforms across the IDB Group, including greater ambition on climate, will create
a more e�ective and impactful IDB Group to assist the region in overcoming its challenges
and seizing the opportunities that the 21st century presents. The United States is prepared
to support a Resolution that charts a clear path of policy reforms that could lead to
considering new resources for IDB Invest. We look forward to the work of our Executive
Directors and working with the managements of the IDB Invest and the IDB to shape the new
value proposition for the IDB Group.