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Counting the Brexit trade cost

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:26
Britain’s manufacturers carried the costs of supply chain disruption in February as Brexit and the third COVID-19 lockdown weighed down growth in factory production, according to the IHS Markit and the Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply survey on Monday....
Categories: European Union

Belgian FM warns against COVID-passport for travel

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:25
There should be “no question of linking vaccination to freedom of movement in Europe” as the European COVID-19 digital vaccination passport aims for, Belgium’s foreign affairs minister Sophie Wilmès warned on Monday. According to Wilmès, the idea of “a standardised...
Categories: European Union

Sarkozy sentenced to three years in prison for corruption and influence peddling

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:25
The Paris criminal court handed down its verdict on Monday, finding former French president Nicholas Sarkozy guilty of corruption and influence-peddling and sentencing him to a three-year sentence, two of which were suspended. This makes Sarkozy the second former president...
Categories: European Union

German government will not make AstraZeneca vaccine available to everyone

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:24
Germany will not make the British-Swedish AstraZeneca vaccine available to everyone in the country, the government announced on Monday although a large amount of these vaccines remain largely unused due to scepticism towards the jab. After an additional delivery on...
Categories: European Union

Tusk: Don’t be naive with Russian and Chinese jabs

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:24
Polish President Andrzej Duda held a phone call on Monday with Chinese President Xi Jinping to discuss the possibility of cooperating on vaccines. However, the call prompted a reaction from Poland’s former prime minister Donald Tusk, the current chief of...
Categories: European Union

Macron s’entretiendra avec Erdogan mardi soir en visioconférence

Euractiv.fr - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:23
Ce sera la première fois que les deux dirigeants se reparleront depuis septembre, précise la présidence, après des mois de vives tensions.
Categories: Union européenne

Lithuania to start supplying LNG to Poland next year

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:17
Lithuanian state-controlled energy company Ignitis Group will start supplying liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Poland next year when a new pipeline between the two countries comes online, its CEO said on Monday (1 March).
Categories: European Union

Belgische Ministerin warnt: Keine „Verknüpfung von Impfung und Reisefreiheit“

Euractiv.de - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:17
Es dürfe "keine Rede davon sein, Impfungen mit der Freizügigkeit in Europa zu verknüpfen", wie es ein digitaler "Impfpass" tun würde, warnte Belgiens Außenministerin Sophie Wilmès am Montag. 
Categories: Europäische Union

Féminisation de leurs directions: Les sociétés suisses ont encore du chemin à faire

24heures.ch - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:15
Aucune femme n’occupe le poste de directrice générale dans les entreprises helvétiques cotées sur l’indice vedette SMI.
Categories: Swiss News

Neoliberal Finance Undermines Poor Countries’ Recovery

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:13

By Anis Chowdhury and Jomo Kwame Sundaram
SYDNEY and KUALA LUMPUR, Mar 2 2021 (IPS)

After being undermined by decades of financial liberalisation, developing countries now are not only victims of vaccine imperialism, but also cannot count on much financial support as their COVID-19 recessions drag on due to global vaccine apartheid.

Anis Chowdhury

Financialisation undermined South
Developing countries have long been pressured to liberalise finance by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. The international financial institutions claimed this would bring net capital inflows. This was supposed to reduce foreign exchange constraints to accelerating growth, creating “a rosy scenario, indeed”.

Globalisation’s claim naively expects “more birds to fly into, rather than out of an open birdcage”. Instead, financial globalisation meant net capital flows from capital-poor developing countries to capital-rich developed countries, i.e., dubbed the “Lucas paradox”. A decade later, flows “uphill” had “intensified over time”.

The past decade saw the largest, fastest and most broad-based foreign debt increase in these economies in half a century. Total foreign debt of emerging market economies rose from around 110% of GDP in 2010 to more than 170% in 2019, while that of low-income countries (LICs) increased from 48% to 67%.

Pandemic woes
Developing countries saw private finance drop by US$700 billion in 2020, while foreign direct investment flows to developing countries declined by 30-45% in 2020. Remittances fell by 7% in 2020, and are expected to fall by another 7.5% in 2021.

Jomo Kwame Sundaram

Meanwhile, developing countries’ indebtedness increased as total aid flows had long fallen short of even half the long promised 0.7% of donor countries’ incomes. In 2020, when developing countries needed it most, donor governments cut bilateral aid commitments by almost 30%.

With limited access to other finance, developing countries, especially LICs, face much higher borrowing costs, even in normal times. With the pandemic, developing countries have been downgraded by rating agencies, further raising borrowing costs.

Facing falling foreign exchange earnings needed to import essential drugs, vaccines and other vital supplies, including food, most countries have to borrow. In 2020, official foreign debt probably rose by 12% of GDP in emerging market economies, and by 8% in LICs. The pandemic thus greatly worsened developing countries’ debt distress.

Before the pandemic, more than a quarter of official revenue went to servicing debt. With the worst recession since the Great Depression in 2020, as well as declining revenue and foreign exchange inflows, debt is now blocking finance for more adequate relief and recovery in many countries.

Debt relief?
Many – even World Bank Chief Economist Carmen Reinhart, once a ‘debt hawk’ – have called for debt relief, but little has happened. IMF debt service relief of about US$213.5 million for 25 eligible LICs ended six months later in mid-October 2020, as scheduled.

The G20’s ‘Debt Service Suspension Initiative for Poorest Countries’ for 73 mainly LICs for May-December 2020 covered around US$20 billion of bilateral public debt owed to official creditors by International Development Association and least developed countries (LDCs).

The G20 initiative did not provide lasting relief, not even reducing foreign debt burdens and barely addressing immediate needs. It merely kicked the can down the road. Debt still had to be repaid in full during 2022–2024 as interest continues to accumulate. It also offered middle income countries (MICs) nothing.

Also, private creditors refused to join in or help out. UNCTAD estimates that in 2020 and 2021, lower MICs and LICs will pay between US$0.7 trillion and US$1.1tn to service debt, as upper MICs pay US$2.0-2.3tn. Meanwhile, some countries have used US$11.3bn of IMF funds meant “for health budgets and food imports” to service private sector debt.

SDRs to the rescue?
Undoubtedly, distressed developing countries desperately need foreign exchange to cope. But IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva’s call to boost global liquidity with “a sizeable SDR” (Special Drawing Right) allocation was blocked by the Trump administration, who objected that it would give China, Iran, Russia, Syria and Venezuela access to new funds.

The Financial Times (FT) argues that the proposed new SDR1tn (US$1.37tn) issuance – almost five times the US$283bn issued in 2009 – is justified by the scale of the crisis. For the FT, it would be “the simplest and most effective way to get additional purchasing power into the hands of the countries that need it”.

It is now widely agreed that “new issuance of SDRs is vital to help poorer countries”. It would augment the IMF’s US$1tn lending capacity, already inadequate to address the ongoing pandemic and economic crises.

SDRs can only be used to pay other central banks, the IMF and 16 “prescribed holders”, including the World Bank and major regional development banks. Thus, SDRs can help foreign exchange constrained countries, especially if rich countries transfer their unused SDRs to the IMF or for development finance.

The IMF could thus expand two existing special funds for LICs: the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust provides interest-free loans, while the Catastrophe Containment and Relief Trust pays interest and principal due on their IMF obligations.

But SDRs are not an equitable magic bullet as apportionment reflects the size of a country’s economy. In other words, rich countries would get much more, regardless of need, as during the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

US role vital
With 85% of IMF votes required to issue new SDRs, and the US holding veto power with 16.5%, Biden administration support is vital. For SDR issuance under US$650 billion, the White House only needs to consult, rather than get approval from the US Congress.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has urged the IMF and World Bank to do everything “they can to ensure that developing countries have the resources for public health and economic recovery”. She has supported new SDRs despite conservative opposition, e.g., from Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal.

But Fund and Bank resources still pale in comparison with the challenge. With preferred creditor status, they can borrow at the much lower interest rates available to them. By so intermediating, they can help developing countries, especially LICs and LDCs, to more cheaply access desperately needed funds.

 


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The post Neoliberal Finance Undermines Poor Countries’ Recovery appeared first on Inter Press Service.

Categories: Africa

Coronavirus : 10 bonnes nouvelles sur la pandémie

BBC Afrique - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:11
Le professeur de microbiologie Ignacio López-Goñi fait le point sur l'expérience scientifique accumulée au cours des derniers mois.
Categories: Afrique

Portugal to ‘immediately follow up’ on Commission’s EU-Mercosur proposal

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:11
Portugal will "immediately follow up" on the proposal for further clarification of the EU-Mercosur agreement that the European Commission presents, the foreign minister said on Monday, reiterating that he "strongly" expects progress on this matter during the Portuguese presidency.
Categories: European Union

EU vaccination certificate will allow ‘resuming normality’, says Portuguese minister

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:06
A proposal for an EU-wide vaccination certificate, due to be presented this month by the European Commission, will allow “resuming normality” in the daily lives of European citizens in the best possible conditions, Portugal's health minister Marta Temido has said.
Categories: European Union

CO2 pollution bounces back, climate goals at risk: IEA

Euractiv.com - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:00
Global CO2 emissions have returned to pre-pandemic levels and then some, threatening to put climate treaty targets for capping global warming out of reach, the International Energy Agency said Tuesday.
Categories: European Union

Le Stade toulousain devient actionnaire pour la planète

Euractiv.fr - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 08:00
Le Stade toulousain a annoncé le mois dernier un partenariat avec Time for the planet, une initiative qui permet à des citoyens, des fonds d’investissement, des banques ou encore des entreprises d'investir à partir de 1 euro pour lutter contre le dérèglement climatique.
Categories: Union européenne

Sarkozy wegen Korruption zu drei Jahren Haft verurteilt

Euractiv.de - Tue, 03/02/2021 - 07:53
Das Pariser Strafgericht hat den ehemaligen französischen Präsidenten Nicolas Sarkozy am Montag der Korruption und der Einflussnahme für schuldig befunden. Es verurteilte ihn zu einer dreijährigen Haftstrafe, von der zwei Jahre zur Bewährung ausgesetzt wurden.
Categories: Europäische Union

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