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COVID-19 sparked an economic crisis ‘like no other’

At Friday’s briefing, WHO officials and the IMF Director discussed the global financial measures that will be needed to blunt the economic impact of the current coronavirus crisis, ensuring protections for health systems and the world’s most vulnerable.

Economic measures must also account for the world’s most vulnerable, said Guest Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), including emerging markets and developing economies.

Key to the IMF’s response includes:

1. Prioritized help for emerging markets and developing economies: these countries are hard hit by the crisis, with fewer resources, collapsing commodities export markets, lost capital and weakened health systems.

As a result, the IMF would prioritize resources for vulnerable countries. “The same way the virus hits vulnerable people with medical pre-conditions hardest, the economic crisis hits vulnerable economies the hardest.”

“Saving lives and protecting livelihoods ought to go hand-in-hand,” Georgieva added.

2. Emergency financing. Georgieva said the IMF was mobilizing emergency funding and had doubled the availability of those resources from $50 billion up to $100 billion, funds that could also help emerging markets and developing economies.

A record number of countries, 85, had reached out to the agency for financing at the same time. “The demand for our financing has skyrocketed,” said Georgieva.

“We have a $1 trillion war chest and we are determined to use as much as necessary in protecting the economy from the scarring of this crisis.”

3. Eased debt obligations for the IMF’s poorest members. Georgieva said that the IMF was mobilizing emergency financing assistance to countries and had increased its capability to ease debt service obligations for these members through the Catastrophe Containment Relief Trust. With the World Bank, she said, the IMF was advocating for a standstill of debt service from the poorest countries to official bilateral creditors.

“This is humanity’s darkest hour,” said Georgieva. “It is a threat to the entire world that requires us to stand tall and protect the most vulnerable of our fair citizens of this planet.”

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