IMF Cites Indonesia
Vaccination & Slowdown After Inner City
Press Asked Of Corruption
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Video
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Jan 7 – When the
International Monetary Fund
held its embargoed media
briefing on December 3, Inner
City Press posed questions
including on Kenya and
Mozambique, which got
answered.
IMF
Spokesperson Gerry Rice read
out two of Inner City Press'
questions, see below.
Now on
January 7 on Indonesia the IMF
has this, from Thomas
Helbling: “An
International Monetary Fund
(IMF) team led by Mr. Thomas
Helbling conducted virtual
discussions on the Indonesian
economy for the 2020 Article
IV Consultation from November
25 to December 11, 2020. At
the end of the virtual
mission, Mr. Helbling issued
the following statement:
“Indonesia has responded with
a bold, comprehensive, and
coordinated policy package to
address the socio-economic
hardship inflicted by the
COVID-19 pandemic. Timely
policy interventions also
helped safeguard
macro-financial and external
stability through a period of
global market stress.
“The outlook is positive.
Building on the economic
rebound in the second half of
2020, real GDP is projected to
expand by 4.8 percent in 2021
and 6 percent in 2022, led by
strong policy support
measures, including COVID-19
vaccine distribution plans as
well as improved global
economic and financial
conditions. “The
uncertainty surrounding the
growth outlook is larger than
usual. Early widespread
vaccination is an upside risk,
while delays could lead to a
more protracted pandemic, a
downside risk. The
macro-financial fallout of the
pandemic and economic downturn
could be larger-than-expected,
and credit conditions could be
slow to improve." We'll have
more on this.
IMF's Rice on December 3: "On
Kenya, the finance ministry
says it is discussing a $2.3
billion lending program with
the IMF, including an initial
disbursement of $725 million
from IMF in the first half of
2021. What is the status of
talks and what is the IMF's
view of the Standard Gauge
Railway from Mombasa to
Nairobi has a budget of a full
Sh 327 billion, which some say
indicates that the budget for
this project was padded?"
Rice said
discussion are underway and it
should go to the IMF Board in
early 2021. He referred to an
earlier IMF report on the
railway - more on that in transcript,
and video here.
Rice also
read out this, from Inner City
Press: "On Mozambique, what is
the impact on the IMF's
approach of the decision by
the EU on €100 million in
direct support to the State
Budget, with “monitoring and
transparency” clauses? Does
the IMF include similar
clauses, in Mozambique and
elsewhere?"
Rice said
yes, such clauses were
included in the IMF's
disbursement to Mozambique in
April. Again, transcript here,
video here.
When the
IMF addressed Asia and
the Pacific on October 20,
Inner City Press attended and
posed a number of questions.
Now on October 21, here are
two IMF answers:
Inner City Press
Q: On Thailand, new BoT Gov.
Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput
said the country's economy
faces severe shocks from the
pandemic, with a recovery
expected to take at least two
years. What is the IMF's
view?
Answer from IMF
Thailand team: Thailand’s
economy has been extensively
affected by the Covid 19
pandemic through its impact on
tourism and global value
chains. The IMF’s October 2020
WEO projected a GDP
contraction of about 7 percent
this year followed by a 4
percent recovery in 2021. The
recovery is expected to be
gradual given the continued
challenges for the tourism
sector and highly uncertain
path of the pandemic. Staff
supports the authorities’
multi-pronged package of
monetary, fiscal and financial
policies to manage risks from
the pandemic outbreak and to
safeguard financial stability.
Inner City Press
Q: What is the IMF's response
to that Indonesia Investments'
MD van der Schaar says the IMF
expects to see a rebound for
Indonesia in 2021, back above
5% (y/y). "My problem is that
these optimistic outlooks are
based on the availability of a
COVID-19 vaccine in early
2021. However, based on what I
read, it takes years to
develop a safe and effective
vaccine."
Answer from the
IMF Indonesia team: Our growth
forecasts are not predicated
on the assumption that a
vaccine will be available in
early 2021. They are based on
the assumption that the
pandemic situation will
gradually improve and that the
economic reopening continues.
More economic sectors will
recover further and operate at
greater capacity as a result.
Together with an improving
external environment, the
further reopening will result
in a rebound in economic
activity. In addition, a
technical factor is an
important reason why annual
growth in 2021 is forecast to
be somewhat higher than the
growth around 5 percent seen
in recent years. The technical
factor, or base effect,
reflects the contraction in
real GDP in the first half of
2020.
Inner City
Press has also asked, "On Sri
Lanka, what is the IMF's view
on news that Sri Lanka intends
to turn to China for a loan
and the analysis thatthst
confirms China 'as lender of
the last resort to the
strategically located South
Asian island nation(s)'?"
When the IMF
addressed sub Saharan Africa
on October 21, Inner City
Press posed questions on
Cameroon and on Cote d'Ivoire.
Inner City Press
asked the IMF's Abebe Aemro
Selassie, Director, African
Department: "On Cameroon, in
light of the October 21
announcement of additional
COVID-related aid, what
safeguards are in place to
engage a lack of corruption in
distribution, and to prevent
the torture which many human
rights groups allege?"
His answer
involved assurances that the
beneficial owners of companies
getting government contracts,
for COVID and otherwise,
should be made public. Video here.
Inner City
Press also asked about Cote
d'Ivoire, where IMF alumni
Ouattara is running for a
third term. The answer was
largely praising Cote d'Ivoire
economic diversity. Here's
the transcript.
Earlier in
the week, Inner City Press
asked the IMF: "What is the
IMF's assessment of the
turmoil in Kyrgyz Republic?
Can or will the IMF to do
anything to assist, including
on continued COVID-19 response
as well as debt to China /
Eximbank?"
His answer,
interim video here,
recounted the IMF's
pre-turmoil assistance to
Kyrgyzstan. here.
Inner City
Press also asked, "On Yemen,
what is the status of the use
of the new riyal banknotes
printed by the Central Bank in
Yemen, and any actions taken
by the IMF?" and, when called
on by video for a follow-up,
about the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict between Azerbaijan
and Armenia. Video on
YouTube here.
On the
latter, Jihad Azour cited the
IMF's Technical Assistant center
set for Almaty, Kazakhstan
and said the IMF joins in
calls for a ceasefire (which
have been mouthed by but not
followed up on by the
UNresponsive UN). We'll have
more on this.
***
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