Washington, DC:
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved today
a disbursement to St. Vincent and the Grenadines following its request
under the Large Natural Disaster Window (LNDW) of the Rapid Credit Facility
(RCF) for SDR 8,172,450 (US$11.6 million). The RCF will help cover its
balance of payment and fiscal needs stemming from the explosive eruption of
the La Soufrière volcano that began on April 9, 2021. This request is the
first of its kind under the LNDW.
St. Vincent and the Grenadines is a small state, vulnerable to external
shocks, including large natural disasters. The explosive volcanic eruption
is hitting St. Vincent and the Grenadines hard, creating an urgent balance
of payments need and a humanitarian crisis while the country continues to
deal with the fallout from the global pandemic. The economy is estimated to
have contracted in 2020 by 3.8 percent as tourism activity fell 70 percent.
While considerable uncertainty about the evolution of the eruption remains,
IMF staff estimate the infrastructure damage to exceed 20 percent of GDP
and for the economy to contract by 6.1 percent in 2021, with agriculture
and related sectors severely affected. A drop in fiscal revenues, combined
with additional social, cleanup and reconstruction expenditures, will
increase the fiscal deficit and financing needs. IMF support will help
cover some of these needs and allow the government to ease the impact on
the population.
Following the Executive Board discussion of the requests, Mr. Tao Zhang,
Deputy Managing Director and acting Chair, made the following statement:
“The ongoing eruption of the La Soufriere volcano has compounded the
economic and social impact from the COVID-19 pandemic, creating
humanitarian challenges and immediate fiscal and balance of payments needs.
The eruption has destroyed livelihoods and a significant part of
agricultural crops, and has caused structural damage to public
infrastructure.
“The authorities responded to the emergency swiftly. A fiscal package
includes humanitarian support, income support for affected sectors and
displaced workers, and cleanup and reconstruction spending. Large
rebuilding expenses will be required given the magnitude of the damages.
“The authorities remain committed to meeting the debt target set by the
Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB). Once the eruption subsides, the
authorities intend to undertake measures to ensure debt sustainability and
rebuild fiscal buffers, including replenishing the Contingencies Fund and
adhering to the Fiscal Sustainability Framework.
“The ECCB and the Financial Services Authority (FSA) are collaborating to
safeguard financial stability. Efforts to strengthen crisis management
plans and enhance the AML/CFT framework will help contain financial risks.
“IMF emergency support under the Large Natural Disaster window of the Rapid
Credit Facility will help fill St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ balance of
payments needs. This represents the first time the window is used. Fund
financing is expected to help catalyze additional donor support. The
authorities remain committed to ensuring transparency and good governance
in the use of humanitarian and crisis-related spending. ”
For information on the emergency financing requests approved by the IMF
Executive Board, please see a link to the IMF Lending Tracker:
https://www.imf.org/en/Topics/imf-and-covid19/COVID-Lending-Tracker
For upcoming discussions on the emergency financing requests, please see a
link to the calendar of the IMF Executive Board meetings:
https://www.imf.org/external/NP/SEC/bc/eng/index.aspx
Factsheet: “IMF Rapid Credit Facility (RCF)”
https://www.imf.org/en/About/Factsheets/Sheets/2016/08/02/21/08/Rapid-Credit-Facility