Washington, DC: The
Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) endorsed today the
recommendations of the IMF staff paper
“Policy Reform Proposals to Promote the Fund’s Capacity to Support
Countries Undertaking Debt Restructurings.”
The reforms are designed to ensure a more agile approach to IMF support to
countries undertaking debt restructuring while maintaining adequate
safeguards for IMF financing and reinforcing the existing architecture for
debt resolution.
A number of recent IMF-supported programs involving debt restructurings
experienced significant delays from the time Staff Level Agreement was
reached until the time the necessary official creditor assurances were
provided to allow the approval of IMF financing.
There has been a marked improvement lately and cases are moving forward
more quickly, with substantial progress in collaboration among official
bilateral creditors. For example, while it took Chad 11 months to move from
a Staff-Level Agreement with the IMF staff to secure the creditor
assurances needed for approval of IMF financing; it took Zambia 9 months to
reach this milestone, Sri Lanka 6 months, and Ghana 5 months. But more
progress is needed.
The staff paper draws lessons from this experience and proposes a set of
reforms in five areas, which should ensure a smoother and speedier process
in the future:
(i) clarifying when and how to apply additional safeguards under IMF’s
financing into official arrears policy, which should help avoid delays at
this stage;
(ii) strengthening the effectiveness and broadening the applicability of
financing assurances reviews when there is an ongoing debt restructuring,
to better encourage adequate progress with the restructuring;
(iii) establishing a more robust and agile approach for deriving financing
assurances from official bilateral creditors (based on supporting and
observing their processes) with the aim to establish these assurances more
rapidly;
(iv) adjusting the IMF’s Approval-in-Principle procedures so that they can
be used to provide a modality for IMF engagement with the member until
financing assurances are established for IMF financing; and
(v) clarifying how the IMF can provide support to members facing arrears to
official creditors when they also face an emergency situation, like a
natural disaster.
The reforms are designed to support the existing architecture for debt
resolution, preserving and complementing what works well while addressing
time gaps that can be created by IMF requirements and enhancing information
flows. The reforms recognize different official creditor processes and
provide a robust framework to support their participation in restructurings
on terms consistent with restoring debt sustainability. The reforms are
also consistent with different sequencing of official and private
restructurings (although this choice remains with the debtor and
creditors). For the IMF, the reforms are overall expected to promote more
agile engagement while maintaining adequate safeguards.
Executive Board Assessment[1]
1. Directors welcomed the opportunity to consider reforms to
promote the Fund’s capacity to support countries undertaking debt
restructurings. Directors agreed that, notwithstanding substantial progress
in recent cases, the Fund’s ability to assist members in resolving their
balance of payments problems may still be constrained. Directors,
therefore, appreciated the opportunity to consider certain policy reforms
to better reflect the current context. Directors agreed that the proposals
endorsed today are accurately reflected in the Executive Board
understandings in Supplement 3 of SM/24/65 to be issued shortly.
Strands 1, 2 and 3 under the LIOA
2. Directors agreed that the Lending Into Official Arrears
(LIOA) policy remains broadly appropriate and that the current guidance on
application of the first, second, and third strands of the policy should be
retained. Most Directors agreed that Strand 1—creditor coordination through
a representative standing forum such as the Paris Club or the Common
Framework involving the Paris Club—should remain the central focus of the
LIOA policy and should be used whenever it is or becomes available. A few
Directors stressed the urgency of recognizing the G20 Common Framework more
generally as a representative standing forum. Directors also reiterated
that, consistent with its current policy, the Fund would normally not apply
Strand 3 (i.e., the three criteria) to a creditor or a group of creditors
with an adequately representative share of total financing contributions,
in particular assessing whether the Fund support would have an undue
negative effect on the Fund’s ability to mobilize official financing
packages in future cases.
Strand 4 under the LIOA
3. At the same time, Directors agreed on the need to clarify
how to apply additional safeguards for Fund lending when the three existing
strands cannot provide a pathway forward. In this regard, Directors
supported the addition of a fourth strand under which the Fund shall seek
additional safeguards where an adequately representative agreement has not
been reached through a representative standing forum, consent is not
forthcoming within 4 weeks of being requested, andthe three
criteria under Strand 3 cannot be satisfied with respect to an official
bilateral creditor. The approach would distinguish the Fund-supported
programs with normal access from those with exceptional access under the
GRA or the PRGT or high combined access under the GRA and PRGT.
4. In the first case, Directors agreed that the “standard
safeguards approach” would apply (except as noted below). This would
require a combination of program design elements—including the phasing of
access under the arrangement (with an initial purchase or disbursement
capped at low access), program conditionality to support the restructuring
process where warranted under the Guidelines on Conditionality, and a
debtor commitment to good faith efforts to establish safeguards for Fund
lending.
5. In the second case, Directors agreed that the “enhanced
safeguards approach” would apply, which requires the debtor commitment and
conditionality requirements under the standard safeguards approach, and in
addition a direct commitment to the Fund by a sufficient set of creditors
about their restructuring intentions. Where such a commitment is provided,
arrears would be considered eliminated (for purposes of the application of
the LIOA policy) for both participating and non-participating creditors.
Directors agreed with the definition of a “sufficient set” of creditors and
the description of the type of commitment as set out in paragraph 22 of the
paper. A “sufficient set” of creditors requires the participation of any
standing creditor forum as well as any creditors with significant influence
over the debtor. For this purpose, a creditor is considered to have
significant influence over the debtor when it has the ability to extract
repayment on more favorable terms, inconsistent with program parameters.
6. Directors agreed that the standard safeguards approach will
normally be sufficient for normal access cases that fall under Strand 4,
but complex cases, involving the prospect of prolonged negotiations or
creditor coordination issues would necessitate a shift to the enhanced
safeguards approach. Thus, the Strand 4 approach would shift to enhanced
safeguards based on an explicit signal that a creditor or creditor group to
which the three criteria in Strand 3 cannot be satisfied either: (1) is
unwilling to restructure their claims in line with program parameters; or
(2) views additional support by the Fund to the debtor’s effort to
coordinate with creditors to be essential. Directors emphasized that it
would be important for a Staff Report to transparently and factually explain
which creditor(s) requested it, and the reason for a shift under normal
access to the enhanced safeguards approach and to limit stigma associated
with any request for this shift. A few Directors asked for granular
information if available about which members in any creditor group made the
request.
7. Directors also agreed that to further support debtor and
creditor efforts towards comparability of treatment, the Fund would subject
any arrears arising out of exercise of a contractual comparability of
treatment clause to the Fund’s non-toleration of arrears policy, as set out
in paragraph 21 of the paper.
Financing Assurances Reviews
8. Directors also supported strengthening financing assurances
reviews under the LIOA and LIA policies while external arrears remain
unresolved, and introducing financing assurances reviews both in cases
where arrears are deemed away under Strands 1 and 4 under the LIOA policy
and in preemptive restructuring cases needed to restore debt sustainability
involving official bilateral creditors until the needed restructuring is
complete. Financing assurances reviews would continue to provide the Fund
with the opportunity to assess continued compliance with the applicable
arrears and financing assurances policies, whether the member’s adjustment
efforts are undermined by developments in debtor and creditor relations,
and whether, in light of progress, the debt situation does not undermine
the restoration of the member’s medium-term external viability and its
capacity to repay the Fund.
9. Directors agreed that in these cases, requests for new Fund
financing should lay out the expected steps and schedule for the
restructuring process in an indicative way. Subsequent reviews should detail
progress against that schedule taking into account all developments to
determine whether the restructuring remains on track to ensure that overall
program objectives are met. Directors called for transparency in any staff
assessment on the consistency of debt restructuring plans with program
parameters. They further supported the proposal that financing assurances
reviews should more explicitly assess whether the Fund still has
appropriate safeguards to proceed with the financing in light of progress
with the restructuring, or needs to introduce additional safeguards.
They stressed that such additional safeguards should be introduced in a
manner well-tailored to the situation and reason for any delay with
most Directors agreeing that a clear signal about a creditor’s
unwillingness to restructure would motivate a shift to enhanced
safeguards.
10. Directors agreed that in line with the proposal to use
financing assurances reviews to more effectively monitor progress in debt
restructurings, going forward, the application of Strand 1 to ongoing and
future debt restructuring cases after the effective date of these policy
changes would also require the completion of a financing assurances review
until such arrears are resolved.
Credible official creditor process
11. For restructuring cases where financing assurances need to be
obtained from official bilateral creditors—namely, pre-emptive cases and
Strand 1 and 4 of the LIOA policy—Directors agreed that such assurances
could be obtained through the Fund’s assessment that a “credible official
creditor process” is underway. Directors stressed the need for clear
guidance on the criteria that the assessment could be built on. In this
context they noted that each creditor would need to establish a robust
track record in delivering timely and successful debt restructurings on
which the Fund could base its understanding of the process, key
decisionmakers involved, and the expected timeframe for the completion of
the debt restructuring, such that an assessment could be made that the key
stage had been reached that would provide the Fund with the necessary
assurances. They also noted that in the absence of sufficient information
or a robust track record to make such an assessment, required financing
assurances could continue to be satisfied by specific and credible
assurances on debt relief/financing. Directors stressed that it would be
important that assessments of COCP be made in a transparent, evenhanded,
and fair manner with enough granularity and robust evidence to allow the
Board to make this delicate judgment. They agreed that the process of
establishing a track record for each of the non-PC creditors’ processes
could in principle move broadly at the same speed, since any restructuring
case typically involves multiple non-PC creditors.
12. Directors endorsed the proposal that, in pre-emptive cases,
financing assurances would only be sought from a “sufficient set” of
creditors, as set out in paragraph 22 of the paper. Directors agreed that
the policy for preemptive restructuring cases for private creditors remains
unchanged.
Exceptional circumstances under the LIOA
13. Directors supported the proposed clarification and guidance on
the “exceptional circumstances” clause in the LIOA policy. First, Directors
agreed that the “exceptional circumstances” clause in the LIOA policy
should focus on natural disasters and a subset of other exogenous shocks,
such as large or global shocks. Second, in assessing whether Fund support
would be expected to advance normalization of relations with official
bilateral creditors and the resolution of the arrears, the Fund’s assessment
would be based on the debtor’s commitment to make good faith efforts toward
resolving the arrears and to conduct itself in a way to promote and
encourage creditor coordination. Third, Directors expected that the
“exceptional circumstances” clause would generally not be satisfied for
cases with long-standing arrears. Finally, Directors agreed that no change
to the qualification criteria for emergency financing instruments is
required. However, they clarified that, where a staff-level agreement has
already been reached for an upper-credit-tranche (UCT) program for a member
undergoing a debt restructuring but an emergency situation arises that
requires the UCT program to be redesigned, redesigning the UCT program may
be infeasible in the emergency timeframe. Directors stressed that even in
emergency situations, the best course of action in a restructuring remains
to work towards a UCT program, and the provision of emergency financing
should not undermine any broader effort underway to secure such a program.
Approval in Principle
14. Directors recognized the continued utility of the Approval in
Principle (AIP) as an optional procedural device to bridge engagement gaps
when agreement on policies has been reached with the member but financing
assurances to restore debt sustainability have not been received. They
agreed that a few clarifications to the AIP are warranted in such cases. A
decision to approve an arrangement in principle shall specify the date by
which the approval would lapse, which would normally be no later than 4
months after approval. A new AIP shall only be permitted once and would
normally be subject to a limit of an additional 4 months. The Fund would
only approve a new AIP if the financing assurances restoring debt
sustainability are likely to be delivered and that the member’s economic
program is being implemented as agreed and remains on track. Once the
financing assurances have been obtained, a second decision of the Executive
Board is required to make the arrangement effective, which is normally
adopted on a Lapse of Time basis. Directors stressed that, in all cases,
staff should aim to bring a UCT program forward for Executive Board
consideration as fast as possible.
15. Directors agreed that the above policy changes will enter into
effect immediately and will apply to all future purchases and
disbursements, including under existing arrangements, where the relevant
policies apply. They emphasized the need for careful implementation to
ensure their effective, transparent and evenhanded application, with a few
Directors stressing in particular the need to minimize the risk of
increasing the burden on debtor countries. Directors called for effective
communication of the policy changes to all stakeholders, including through
the planned Guidance, as well as for adequate support through capacity
development and close cooperation with other workstreams, including the
Common Framework and the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable.
Directors agreed to
maintain the review of the LIOA policy, including the present reforms, onan
as needed basis.
[1]
At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as
Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors,
and this summary is transmitted to the country's authorities. An
explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found
here:
http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm
.