Washington, DC:
Ms. Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) made the following statement today:
“I am delighted to announce that the new Resilience and Sustainability
Trust (RST) has become operational. Today, I notified the Executive Board
that with our fundraising to date, the RST is ready to start lending
operations. We promised, and we delivered. For that, I am immensely
grateful to our members for coming together and showing solidarity in times
of unprecedented challenges.
In less than three years, the world has lived through shock, after shock,
after shock. First, the COVID pandemic. Then Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
and the ensuing cost-of-living crisis. And there is no pause button on the
climate crisis while we deal with these other crises.
As the IMF’s first ever facility to provide long-term affordable financing,
the RST aims to support countries build resilience to structural
challenges—such as climate change and pandemics—to help maintain
longer-term economic and financial stability, while catalyzing other public
and private financing.
With the strong support of our members, we have achieved the ambitious goal
that was set by the IMFC and the G-20 to make the RST operational around
the time of the 2022 IMF/World Bank Annual Meetings. This means that the
Executive Board can start approving members’ requests for Resilience and
Sustainability Facility (RSF) arrangements, and I look forward to the
initial set of requests to be discussed at the Executive Board in the
coming months.
The IMF’s Executive Board approved the establishment of the RST in April
2022 to serve as a third pillar of the IMF’s lending toolkit, in addition
to the
General Resources Account
(GRA) and the
Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust
(PRGT), and provides financing with a 20-year maturity and a 10½‑year grace
period. It will support eligible low and middle-income countries—comprising
about three-quarters of the IMF’s membership. The RST will amplify the
impact of the US$650 billion SDR allocation implemented last year by
channeling resources from economically stronger members to countries where
the needs are greatest.
My immense gratitude goes to Australia, Canada, China, Germany, Japan, and
Spain for providing the first round of resource contributions amounting to
a total of SDR 15.3 billion (US$ 20 billion).
This first round of RST resources represents just over half of the total of
current RST pledges of SDR 29 billion (US$ 37 billion) from 13 countries.
Further contributions are expected to become effective in early 2023 once
countries have completed their domestic procedures, ensuring the RST is in
a strong position to meet demand for RSF arrangements in the coming years.
Additional countries are expected to pledge over time, and we will continue
our fundraising efforts to broaden the pool of contributors and ensure that
the RST has sufficient resources.
On the demand side, I am encouraged to see the strong interest from
countries to access financing from the RST. We are already in advanced
discussions with a diverse group of countries in their climate policy
actions. The IMF is building experience with this new instrument through
this initial phase, and lessons from these cases will benefit the broader
group of eligible countries in the future.
We are also preparing the ground for RST lending to support policies for
pandemic preparedness, through good cooperation with other international
institutions.”
For more details, please use the following links:
IMF Resilience and Sustainability Trust
Resilience and Sustainability Trust FAQs (imf.org)
The Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) (imf.org)