ABIDJAN,
Ivory Coast, October 22, 2020/ -- Multilateral development finance
institutions on Wednesday pledged to continue to collaborate in their
efforts to mitigate the adverse impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic and
accelerate the recovery of economies and livelihoods.
At
an extraordinary virtual meeting to discuss the impact of their
responses to the pandemic and the worsening debt situation, the
organizations said that sustaining their joint efforts would protect
livelihoods, especially among vulnerable populations, preserve
macroeconomic stability and promote a stronger private sector role after
COVID-19.
The meeting, chaired by Hajjar Bandar,
President of the Islamic Development Bank Group, was attended by the
heads of 12 Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs). They discussed how to
achieve maximum impact in their relief efforts, and the debt
sustainability of beneficiary countries.
Bandar said the
collaboration by the MDBs had proven meaningful in their efforts to
swiftly provide crucial financial relief to member countries in the wake
of the pandemic.
“In the face of this unprecedented crisis, we
have shown our responsibility and unity…The total package has already
started disbursing and is bearing fruits,” Bandar said.
The joint
effort of the MDBs has seen a COVID-19 response envelope of about $230
billion. In addition, the IMF has provided financing to 81 member
countries totaling over $100 billion since mid-March, with further room
for member countries to tap into its $1 trillion lending capacity
through program arrangements.
He urged members to sustain the
collaboration to steer financing towards development, help communities
out of poverty and spur digitization and promote education. “This forum
is where partnerships make a difference. We need to join forces to
support our member countries better.”
President of the African
Development Bank Group, Akinwumi Adesina, said collaboration among
development partners has become more vital than ever to help economies
recover from the pandemic and attract private financing to rebuild
infrastructure.
“We are really…in very extraordinary times.
There’s no doubt about it, in terms of the devastation that this
pandemic is causing. The challenge is huge and the collective resolve
must be strong as MDBs,” he said.
He said efforts must be
deepened to help member states mobilize more domestic resources and
attract private creditors to participate in financing capital projects.
“It’s
time for us to change the paradigm to get the private sector, with
incentives, to do a lot of private-public partnerships,” Adesina said,
restating the Bank’s commitment to helping Africa rebuild boldly and
smartly.
The African Development Bank Group introduced a COVID-19
Response Facility (CRF) of up to $10 billion to support Regional Member
Countries and private sector clients in their efforts to address the
impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.
MDBs represented at the meeting
include the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB), Asian Development Bank
(ADB), Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), Council of Europe
Development Bank (CEB), the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) and the European Investment Bank (EIB), the
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), International Finance Corporation
(IFC), International Monetary Fund (IMF), the New Development Bank
(NDB), World Bank Group and the African Development Bank.
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