G7 finance ministers agreed to create emergency reserve funds for developing countries wrestling with coronavirus economic impacts. The funds are likened to a type of currency the International Monetary Fund creates, called Special Drawing Rights (SDRs).
This is the strongest public statement to date from G7 countries on the need for SDRs to confront the COVID economic crisis that is ravaging developing countries.
We are waiting on the IMF to formally assess the needs of poor countries to decide on the size of a SDR issuance. There is no doubt that developing countries have needs north of a trillion dollars.
SDRs were last created following the 2008 financial crisis. On Tuesday, Jubilee USA Network organized a roundtable with high ranking religious leaders and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen that focused on SDRs.
Treasury is a strong proponent of moving forward development aid and debt relief. As countries are struggling from the crisis, we need to be sure the aid is enough and that all developing countries can get the support they need.
In February, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops and Jubilee USA sent a letter on SDRs to President Biden and Yellen. @JubileeUSA with @latindadd, organized a letter with more than 200 organizations calling on the G20 to support a SDR issuance.
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Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, @JubileeUSA and some of the highest-ranking religious leaders met on global COVID response on Tuesday.
The high-level roundtable discussion focused on emergency SDR reserve funds, debt policies, aid, climate change, Puerto Rico relief and bankruptcy, transparency and tax proposals to prevent future crises.
The meeting with Secretary Yellen and leaders from the largest faith traditions was historic. Since the beginning of the pandemic, religious institutions have called for responses to the COVID crisis that protect the vulnerable and address inequality.