This week, the watchdogs of the world economy are gathering at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to tackle a formidable list of issues, including sluggish global growth, the vulnerability of the banking sector, and mounting calls for multilateral change.
The G20’s finance ministers and central bank governors (FMCBG) will convene in Washington, DC, on April 12 and 13 in conjunction with the IMF’s annual spring meetings with the World Bank.
While issues with the world economy will be top of mind, it may be challenging to come up with a consensus action plan due to tensions relating to the war in Ukraine.
The World Bank revised its 2023 global economic growth prediction downward, from 3 percent to just 1.7 percent. Kristalina Georgieva, the head of the IMF, forecasted years of anaemic growth last week.
Lenders located in Washington have issued a warning that the global banking system is experiencing financial instability due to interest rate increases intended to curb inflation.
The US Federal Reserve increased its benchmark rate by 4.5 percentage points over the previous 13 months, and other significant central banks did the same.
A portion of the responsibility for the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank has been placed on higher interest rates, which reduce the value of fixed-rate assets and increase the likelihood of default for instruments with variable rates. Market concerns swiftly expanded to Europe, leading to the shotgun takeover of long-struggling Credit Suisse by international investment bank UBS in March.
“When central banks started raising interest rates in an effort to bring down consumer prices, the era of cheap money came to an end. Since then, risk appetite has decreased globally, according to Glossop.
More specifically, it has caused widespread currency depreciations versus the dollar and higher borrowing costs. Falling currency prices increase the cost of existing international debt repayments in addition to increasing import costs.
Due to this, there have been calls for the G20, whose member states account for two-thirds of the world’s population and 85% of the global GDP, to strive towards debt relief for developing nations.
China, the biggest sovereign creditor in the world, is the recipient of almost 66 percent of the official debt held by low-income nations.
According to the Reuters news agency, India requested that bilateral lenders, including China, accept losses on existing loans at the most recent FMCBG conference.
In contrast, China has criticised multilateral lenders like the IMF and World Bank for refusing to take haircuts on loans.
Beijing has consistently insisted that debt relief initiatives [among all creditors] should be collaborative and all-encompassing, according to Guzman. Therefore, the FMCBG this week will be a fantastic chance to address the shared framework.
The G20’s common framework aims to coordinate sovereign debt reduction across its members and ask private lenders for the same restructuring terms.
Only four nations have ratified so far. None of the debt negotiations have yet been concluded.
Guzman continued, saying that “improved rules, like suspending debt repayments during negotiations and extending.
The common framework to middle-income countries [rather than just low-income nations] would help to validate the initiative.”
By lowering its loan-to-equity ratio by just 1%, the Bank could raise billions more for developing nations.
His comments were supported by a G20 research from July, which suggested that MDBs could increase their lending capacity by hundreds of billions of dollars by slightly altering their lending ratios.
Persaud nevertheless views the World Bank’s shift in leadership this year as “positive”.
Stakeholders are starting to rethink their attitudes about issues like the environment and the debt of emerging nations, according to Persaud. The appointment of Banga proves that. He will have a small window of opportunity to make changes at the beginning of his tenure. Hope the G20 would back him.