Amid COVID 19 IMF Devotes $361M to
Bosnia After Inner City Press Asked Why Some
Excluded
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
April 21 –
Before the International
Monetary Fund's February 13
embargoed briefing,
Inner City Press asked the IMF
to confirm or deny something
in the crypto-currency media,
that "IMF ADVISES EASTERN
CARIBBEAN STATES TO TRIAL
DIGITAL CURRENCY." See below.
Now on
April 21 amid the Coronavirus
crisis
on Bosnia the IMF
has
announced, "Pandemic
impact
expected to be
substantial
and generate
rapid external
accounts
deterioration;
Economy
expected to
decline 5
percent in
2020 and
recover to 3.5
percent in
2021 Rapid
Financing
Instrument
will help
provide
support for
scaling up
priority
spending on
health and
social
assistance,
while
preserving
debt
sustainability.
The Executive
Board of the IMF
today approved
SDR 265.2
million (about
US$361 million
or €333
million, 100
percent of its
SDR quota) in
emergency
assistance for
Bosnia and
Herzegovina
(BiH) under
the Rapid
Financing
Instrument
(RFI). It will
help the
country meet
an urgent
balance-of-payments
need due to
the global
outbreak of
the COVID-19
pandemic.
The RFI
provides rapid
and low-access
financial
assistance to
member
countries
facing an
urgent balance
of payments
need, without
the need for a
full-fledged
economic
program or
reviews. It
can provide
support to
meet a broad
range of
urgent needs,
including
those arising
from commodity
price shocks,
natural
disasters,
conflict and
post-conflict
situations.... The
RFI will
support the
authorities’
efforts to
increase
spending for
containing
COVID-19 human
costs and
mitigating its
economic
impact." More
than the UN of
Antonio Guterres, now spreading
COVID-19 in
South Sudan
with a UN bus
with no
social
distancing, ever
did.
On
April 15 to
the IMF and
World Bank's
Annual
Meetings Inner
City Press
posed these
questions,
after it got
an IMF answer
on Morocco,
here: "On the
IMF's CCRT
debt service
relief, please
explain why
Tanzania is
not among the
19 African
countries on
the list.
Also, please
comment on
public reports
Kenya is not
on because
over-income,
and the Zambia
is off due to
"corruption"
issues. What
about
Cameroon's
Paul Biya, not
seen in public
for weeks?
Does the IMF
have a view on
how countries
should address
their prison
systems as the
Coronavirus
spreads in
them?"
The Director
of the IMF's
Africa
Department
Abebe Aemro
Selassie
replied,
diplomatically
as ever, that
thirty two
countries have
made requests,
and that the
IMF envisions
$11.5 billion,
with an
initial focus
on the poorest
25 or so, more
if more money
comes in,
citing the UK
and Japan and
the IMF's
speed on
Madagascar.
More to
follow.
The other
issues were not addressed, nor
have some of Inner City Press'
other pending questions been
answered. But we remain
hopeful.
For
now, the
IMF has said,
"the countries
that will
receive debt
service relief
today are:
Afghanistan,
Benin, Burkina
Faso, Central
African
Republic,
Chad, Comoros,
Congo, D.R.,
The Gambia,
Guinea,
Guinea-Bissau,
Haiti,
Liberia,
Madagascar,
Malawi, Mali,
Mozambique,
Nepal, Niger,
Rwanda, São
Tomé and
Príncipe,
Sierra Leone,
Solomon
Islands,
Tajikistan,
Togo and
Yemen."
Inner City Press
covers not only the IMF but
also all things crypto in the
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York,
for example SEC
v. Telegram and the
prosecution of Virgil
Griffith formerly of
Ethereum. Inner
City Press asked the IMF, "It
is reported that to the
Eastern Caribbean Currency
Union, the IMF suggests to
experiment with a common
digital currency, on a
blockchain. Can you
elaborate?"
While IMF
spokesperson Gerry Rice during
the briefing answered
Inner City Press' Somalia and
Egypt questions, it was
afterward that this answer
arrived by e-mail,
"attributable to Gerry Rice,
IMF Spokesman and Director of
Communications:
'The IMF did not
suggest to experiment with a
common digital currency. In
March 2019, the Eastern
Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB)
launched a central bank
digital currency pilot
project, using blockchain
technology, on its own
initiative.
As noted
in the IMF Concluding
Statement of the 2019
discussion on the common
policies of the Eastern
Caribbean Currency Union
(ECCU) member countries, the
digital currency could expose
the ECCB and the financial
system to various risks,
including for financial
intermediation, financial
integrity, and cybersecurity.
Given these risks of the
digital currency, the IMF
stressed that the ongoing
pilot project should proceed
cautiously.”
So there. (A
OneCoin / Bulgaria question
remains outstanding). We
appreciate the IMF's answer.
Watch this site, for IMF news
and... all things crypto,
good, bad and ugly.
***
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