Washington, DC
– May 18, 2022: International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing
Director Kristalina Georgieva made the following statement today following
the publication of a Joint International Financial Institution (IFI) Plan to Address Food Insecurity:
“Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has precipitated serious economic and social
consequences around the globe. Among them, many countries are now facing
dangerous food shortages and sharply higher prices for food, energy, and
fertilizers. These pressures occur at a time when countries’ public
finances are already stretched from the pandemic and public debt burdens
are high. With inflation reaching the highest levels seen in decades,
vulnerable households in low- and middle-income countries are most at risk
of acute food insecurity. And history has shown that hunger often triggers
social unrest and violence.
“If we have learned one lesson from the 2007-08 food crisis, it is that the
international community needs to take fast and well-coordinated actions to
effectively tackle a food crisis, by maintaining open trade, supporting
vulnerable households, ensuring sufficient agricultural supply, and
addressing financing pressures. I am honored to have been able to work
together with the heads of other International Financial Institutions to
propose concrete actions. Coordination between us will be critical for the
plan to have maximum impact in quickly alleviating food insecurity,
especially for the most vulnerable households in the most vulnerable
countries.
“Working closely with the World Bank and other International Financial
Institutions, the IMF will provide policy advice, capacity development
assistance, and financial support to catalyze and complement financing from
other institutions. The IMF is investing in its monitoring capacity to
allow for timely identification of countries with the most pronounced
financing pressures, especially fragile and conflict-affected states, which
will particularly be affected by food insecurity.
“The IMF is working with country authorities on macroeconomic frameworks
and policy priorities. A critical area of focus is to assist countries in
their efforts to rapidly improve social safety nets to protect vulnerable
households from the imminent threat of hunger. Helping members identify
ways to safeguard food security without resorting to export restrictions
has been another priority. These policy objectives are reflected in the
IMF’s program engagement. IMF financial support for
Moldova
(recently augmented to help address the harmful effects of the war)
and
Mozambique
, for instance, includes a focus on strengthening social safety nets for
vulnerable households.
“The IMF will also bring to bear its new
Resilience and Sustainability Trust
, which will provide affordable longer-term financing for countries facing
structural challenges, while countries with acute financing needs could
access IMF emergency financing, where appropriate. The IMF is intensifying
efforts with the World Bank and others to support debt restructurings where
needed.”
Background:
Following a meeting of International Financial Institutions (IFIs) and
global leaders convened by the US Treasury on April 19 “
Tackling Food Insecurity: the challenges and call to action
,” the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the African Development Bank
(AfDB), Asian Development Bank (ADB), European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD), Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the World Bank,
and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) have worked
together to formulate a joint action plan to address food insecurity. According to the plan, published today, the IFIs will pursue actions to
step up, surge, and scale their work across six priority goals: (i) support
vulnerable people; (ii) promote open trade; (iii) mitigate fertilizer
shortages; (iv) support food production now; (v) invest in
climate-resilient agriculture for the future; and (vi) coordinate for
maximum impact.