View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

4/17/2024

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Press Conference Ahead of the 2024 Spring Meetings of the In…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Press
Conference Ahead of the 2024 Spring Meetings of the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank
April 16, 2024

As Prepared for Delivery
Thank you for being here today. Before highlighting priorities for this week, I want to address
the unprecedented attack on Israel this past weekend by Iran and its proxies. Treasury will not
hesitate to work with our allies to use our sanctions authority to continue disrupting the
Iranian regimeʼs malign and destabilizing activity.

I. GLOB AL ECONOMIC OUT LOOK AND U.S. ECONOMIC
POLICY
Let me now turn to the global economic outlook, which remains resilient. Global growth has
consistently exceeded the predictions of many forecasters and the IMF projects it will
continue at 3.2 percent this year and 3.1 percent next year.
Global economic performance has in part been powered by a strong U.S. economy. While even
one year ago, many forecasted much weaker U.S. economic performance, U.S. GDP growth is
strong and expectations have been revised upward since January. The labor market is also
remarkably healthy. Inflation has come down significantly since its peak, though we have more
work to do. Weʼre also focused on building on our historically fast and inclusive recovery by
investing for the medium- and long-term, including through President Bidenʼs Investing in
America agenda.
We of course recognize that the recovery has been uneven across and within many countries
and that there remain risks to the global outlook. And from the start of the Administration,
President Biden has made clear that American isolationism was over. So while we expect that
Americaʼs economic strength will continue to underpin global growth, weʼve also been
engaging with the world to mitigate short-term risks and support sustainable long-term
growth. Weʼll continue doing so this week.

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2255

1/5

4/17/2024

II.

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Press Conference Ahead of the 2024 Spring Meetings of the In…

B ILAT ERAL ENGAGEMENTS

As Treasury Secretary, Iʼve focused on deepening economic ties with both our longstanding
allies and partners and emerging markets. President Biden and I believe that promoting peace
and prosperity abroad leads to stronger markets that can benefit American workers and firms
through trade and investment. And deepening ties helps us build resilient supply chains—an
approach Iʼve called friendshoring—which bolsters our nationʼs economic security and brings
benefits to other economies.
This week, Iʼll meet with South Korea and Japan for the first Trilateral Finance Ministers
meeting to coordinate on issues from sanctions to climate and financial resilience in the
Pacific Islands. Iʼll participate in a Trilateral Principal Level Exercise with the United Kingdom
and European Banking Union to help fortify our systems for rapid coordination and
communication during times of financial stress. And Iʼll continue working with Brazil on
priorities for its G20 Presidency—as we worked with India last year and will work with South
Africa next year.
Iʼll also remain focused on our relationship with China. While in China last week, I emphasized
that a healthy U.S.-China economic relationship with a level playing field can bring significant
benefits for American firms and workers. And I raised concerns the United States shares with
many other countries about overcapacity, which poses risks to America and to the global
economy. The U.S. and China also announced that we are increasing cooperation in our shared
work against anti-money laundering; engaging in exchanges on balanced growth in the
domestic and global economies; and expanding ongoing technical exchanges on financial
regulation and financial stability.
Weʼll sustain momentum this week by holding in-person the fourth meetings of the
Economic and Financial Working Groups, which allow us to share information, identify
potential areas of cooperation, and, when we disagree, frankly communicate concerns. These
meetings will include important discussions on anti-money laundering and balanced growth.

III.

INT ERNAT IONAL F INANCIAL ARCHIT ECT URE

Alongside bilateral engagements, weʼre focused this week on continuing our e orts to
strengthen the international financial architecture. Heightened vulnerabilities from challenges
including climate change, pandemics, and fragility and conflict pose risks to global growth and

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2255

2/5

4/17/2024

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Press Conference Ahead of the 2024 Spring Meetings of the In…

development. No one country can tackle these issues alone, nor is bilateral action su icient,
so weʼve pushed for decisive and coordinated action.
Since I called for MDB evolution, World Bank President Ajay Banga and leaders across the
MDB system have enabled significant progress toward building better, bigger, and more
e ective MDBs that help uphold the rules-based international order and are positioned to
drive tangible impact. Weʼve generated nearly $250 billion in new lending capacity over the
next decade: $200 billion from responsibly stretching balance sheets and pursuing innovative
measures and almost $50 billion from capital increases we successfully negotiated at the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the Inter-American Development
Bank.
Looking ahead, we hope to agree on a callable capital increase for the African Development
Bank next month. And weʼre focused on achieving a robust IDA replenishment that provides
crucial resources to the worldʼs poorest and most vulnerable countries, as well as on ongoing
work to incentivize projects with cross-border impacts, mobilize private capital, and bolster
climate financing. The MDBs invested nearly $100 billion in climate finance in 2022, of which
$60 billion went to low- and middle-income countries. Weʼre now working with Brazil to
facilitate increased access to climate finance through a review of the climate finance
architecture.
Weʼre also urging the MDBs to increase their focus on fragility and conflict, which can reverse
hard-won development gains, undermine the impact of new investments, and have farranging spillover e ects such as increasing food insecurity. We see current challenges in Haiti,
Africa, the Middle East, and elsewhere, and know more needs to be done, as Iʼll discuss this
week with President Banga and leaders from IDA countries facing these challenges directly.
At the IMF, weʼre focused on further strengthening the institutionʼs ability to serve at the
center of the global financial safety net and play a crucial crisis response function. The U.S.
and other countries achieved a landmark 50 percent increase in IMF quota resources. At home,
Congress authorized $21 billion in lending to the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust, which
is key to enabling low-income countries to restore macroeconomic stability and address debt
sustainability risks, and extended our participation in the IMFʼs New Arrangements to Borrow
through 2030, helping shore up a critical second line of defense in the IMFʼs resources. As we
head into Managing Director Kristalina Georgievaʼs second term, weʼll push for strong IMF
programs that incorporate robust policy conditionality to enable countries to restore stability
and exit from IMF lending and weʼll seek greater collaboration across the IMF and MDBs.
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2255

3/5

4/17/2024

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Press Conference Ahead of the 2024 Spring Meetings of the In…

We also continue to urge progress in particular debt restructuring cases, as weʼve achieved in
Zambia, and to advance general reforms through the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable,
which will meet this week. Many countries that are solvent are also facing increasing
challenges. In 2022, net inflows to developing countries dropped to their lowest level since
2009. This means too much money flowing out in the form of debt service relative to how
much finance is flowing in. We need to examine debt service where itʼs a binding constraint on
necessary investments related to climate and development; channel even more resources to
countries making reforms; and deploy all our tools in a coordinated way to support these
countries in making key investments.

IV.

ONGOING CONF LICTS

Finally, weʼre focused this week on advancing our work to protect human lives and the global
economy in the context of ongoing conflicts.
As Russiaʼs invasion of Ukraine continues in its third year, we remain committed to standing
as part of a global coalition to support Ukraine and constrict Russiaʼs ability to wage its brutal
war. This is a humanitarian and moral imperative and also an economic one given the warʼs
significant negative impacts on economies around the world. Iʼm glad that the IMF recently
a irmed Ukraineʼs strong performance on its program and is providing financing and expertise
to support economic growth and a robust reform agenda. And I urge the U.S. House of
Representatives to provide critical support for our allies, including Ukraine. We announced
additional sanctions on Russiaʼs National Payment Card System and on Russian regional
financial institutions in February. And we are continuing to work with our international
partners to unlock the economic value of immobilized Russian sovereign assets and ensure
that Russia pays for the damage it has caused.
Weʼre also responding to challenges in the Middle East. The attack by Iran and its proxies
underscores the importance of Treasuryʼs work to use our economic tools to counter Iranʼs
malign activity. Weʼve targeted over 500 individuals and entities connected to terrorism and
terrorist financing by the Iranian regime and its proxies since the start of the Administration,
including targeting Iranʼs drone and missile programs and its financing of Hamas, the Houthis,
Hizballah, and Iraqi militia groups. From this weekendʼs attack to the Houthi attacks in the
Red Sea, Iranʼs actions threaten the regionʼs stability and could cause economic spillovers.
As we continue to use economic tools, including against Hamas, we have emphasized
Treasuryʼs humanitarian-related authorizations to ensure sanctions do not impede life-saving
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2255

4/5

4/17/2024

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Press Conference Ahead of the 2024 Spring Meetings of the In…

aid. In Gaza, the entire population—over two million people—faces acute food insecurity and
most of the population has been displaced. It is incumbent on all of us here at these meetings
to do everything in our power to end this su ering. Finally, to support stability in the West
Bank and Gaza, Israel, and the broader Middle East region, we are targeting perpetrators of
extremist settler violence in the West Bank, working to ensure a functioning banking system
there, and supporting the IMF programs in Jordan and Egypt.
With that, Iʼll now take your questions.
###

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2255

5/5