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Policy issues in the EFF programme — III
Policy issues in the EFF programme — III

Business Recorder

time21 hours ago

  • Business
  • Business Recorder

Policy issues in the EFF programme — III

Covid-19 pandemic, and then the catastrophic floods in 2022, both of which had significant climate change causality – towards which Pakistan has contributed very little in terms of global carbon footprint – and pushed the country to take on considerable amount of loan — on top of its already difficult situation in terms of debt distress before these two events — that has created a meaningful gross financing issue for the country over the last few years, and over a medium term horizon. Multilateral support during both these events has been seriously lacking, including the one-time SDR allocation by IMF to the tune of around USD 2.7 billion in August 2021 – where allocation rather than being based on needs in the exceptional environment of the pandemic, was made as per the usual criteria of quota – was significantly far less than what was needed. Despite repeated calls by development activists internationally, and similar demands made under Barbados's PM Mia Mottley-led 'Bridgetown Initiative', nothing of substance has been done in this regard by the IMF. Table 3b titled 'Pakistan: External Gross Financing Requirements and Sources, 2022/23–2029/30' from May 2025 released 'IMF Country Report No. 25/109' highlights this otherwise much needed provision of IMF SDR allocation to be zero over the medium-term, which is the entire period covered in the table. On the contrary, financing requirements are huge – from FY2025-26 to FY2029-30 they are projected at USD 19.3 billion, USD 19.8 billion, USD 31.4 billion, USD 23.1 billion, and USD 22.2 billion, respectively – even after including very modest levels of current account deficit — for the same fiscal years, being projected at USD 1.5 billion, USD 2.1 billion, USD 3.9 billion, USD 4.7 billion, and USD 5.7 billion, respectively. Policy issues in EFF programme — I Pakistan's exports depend heavily on imported intermediaries, which are not possible to be appropriately make in the wake of lack of meaningful support from IMF in terms of enhanced SDR allocation — on top of releases to the tune of only USD 1 billion from time to time over roughly three-year EFF programme, which began in September 2024, and which are quite insignificant when seen in the context of the huge gross financing requirements — since the quota-based SDR allocation as assistance in the pandemic in August 2021 was low to start with, and since then likely climate change caused floods-related losses have not received much multilateral support, not to mention that the country is among the top-ten most vulnerable countries with regard to climate change crisis, and faces significant gross financing requirements over the medium term. Hence, in the absence of meaningful SDR allocation, and the adoption of otherwise unjustified over-board austerity policy, it is hard to import needed level of intermediaries for exports, which is among the main sustainable sources to achieve macroeconomic stability, to come out of the debt distress, and to move towards higher economic growth. Moreover, a lack of exports would mean lack of capacity to sustainably meet debt obligations, where unlike IMF's assessment in the report that 'Public debt remains sustainable over the medium-term… near-term risks of sovereign stress remain high…' both short-term, and medium-term risks are high, especially due to significant downside risks on account of a very volatile geopolitical situation – the recent Iran-Israel conflict saw a sudden spike in oil prices from around USD 65 per barrel to around USD 75 per barrel — and fast-unfolding climate change crisis — the Finance Minister reportedly indicated a significant role of climate change in reducing in reducing agricultural yield of major crops over the current fiscal year — creating upward pressures on imports payments, along with likely hurting exports, which overall means further increase in external financing gap, and may also result in greater debt distress. Policy issues in the EFF programme – II Instead of realizing the need to provide meaningful support in terms of enhanced SDR allocation — which is a global need being highlighted over the last few years, as indicated above, as a number of developing countries are facing serious debt distress — IMF is dealing with this situation in a routine way, in terms of the usual prescription of country enhancing its productive efficiency, which is in general a rather long-term variable in the presence of non-radical economic reform strategy that the neoliberal, and over-board austerity-based current EFF programme is not allowing. In the meantime, the country is stuck in a low-growth equilibrium. Lack of needed much larger reform scope in the current EFF programme, austerity-based approach not allowing greater investment into the demos to enhance their economic empowerment, and political voice to put greater pressure on public policy for radical, and deeper reforms, and no enhanced allocation of SDRs – not even once over the medium-term, which is the entire time horizon reflected in the programme document – coupled with a highly volatile environment of polycrisis, will likely not allow the country to reach sustainable macroeconomic stability. This in turn, would not allow the country to board an upward moving economic growth trajectory in any sustainable way. In that sense, the current EFF programme is just providing financial support mainly for a few more years to pass in a low-growth environment, which will neither help in creating basis for enhancing the export base for meaningfully dealing with the debt distress, including bringing gross financing needs to a sustainable level, nor will allow build-up of economic growth, and resilience to lower the otherwise fast-increasing poverty levels – where close to half of the population is below poverty line as per recently released World Bank figures – and to be better prepared for climate change crisis, and related 'Pandemicene' phenomenon; where Pakistan is among the top-ten climate change crisis affected countries. (Concluded) Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley on Building Bridges Toward a Better Climate Future
Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley on Building Bridges Toward a Better Climate Future

Time​ Magazine

time26-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Time​ Magazine

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley on Building Bridges Toward a Better Climate Future

Barbados may be a small country in size and population, but Prime Minister Mia Mottley has seen that the Caribbean nation plays a big role in the fight against the climate crisis. In her speech at the 2025 TIME Earth Awards in Manhattan on April 23, Mottley pointed to the late Pope Francis, who 'remained forthright in stating what was necessary for us at the personal level, but also the level of the planet Earth: we have to work to save the planet.' 'He said clearly that we need a conversation which includes everyone, not some of us, but everyone, since the environmental challenge that we are undergoing and its human roots concern and affect us all.' Mottley, who became the first female Prime Minister of Barbados in 2018, isn't afraid to pave the way. She has implemented a plan to phase out fossil fuels and transition to 100% renewable energy by 2030. Mottley is clear about the contentious political climate that affects environmental action. 'We are at an awkward stage in the world's development,' Mottley said. 'When you hear companies and financial institutions that a year ago were still promoting the importance of climate finance all of a sudden say they don't need it and they don't believe in it anymore, you begin to wonder if this is real.' But she's also clear-eyed about what's at stake, including the fact that the historically largest polluters are often the richest nations yet don't bear the brunt of the climate crisis' impacts. Rather, less developed countries in the Global South, like Barbados, which faces rising sea levels and more frequent storms, often do. Mottley launched the Bridgetown Initiative at COP26 in 2021, as a plan to push rich countries to support developing nations in adapting to climate change by aiming to mobilize trillions of dollars in green investments. 'If we don't get this equation correct, it is going to destabilize our access to food and water, our access to security,' she said. Part of the key, she said, is in finding the 'love language' that makes conversations between opposing sides—climate activists and climate deniers—possible. 'We're not going to win all the battles in the current geopolitical climate, but we can win a battle where there is common purpose.' Mottley implored businesses and individuals to eschew apathy and indifference—and for world leaders to join in on the conversation around the climate crisis, regardless of political differences. 'The truth is that if we look back at history, we know that history doesn't move in a straight line, but it is important that we keep the trajectory and the direction moving in the right way,' Mottley said. 'There are people whose very existence depends on us finding ways of building bridges through this difficult and challenging time.'

Mia Mottley Accepts 2025 TIME Earth Award
Mia Mottley Accepts 2025 TIME Earth Award

Yahoo

time24-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mia Mottley Accepts 2025 TIME Earth Award

Mia Mottley on Sept. 27, 2024. Credit - Li Rui—Xinhua/Getty Images Barbados may be a small country in size and population, but Prime Minister Mia Mottley has seen that the Caribbean nation plays a big role in the fight against the climate crisis. In her speech at the 2025 TIME Earth Awards in Manhattan on April 23, Mottley pointed to the late Pope Francis, who 'remained forthright in stating what was necessary for us at the personal level, but also the level of the planet Earth: we have to work to save the planet.' 'He said clearly that we need a conversation which includes everyone, not some of us, but everyone, since the environmental challenge that we are undergoing and its human roots concern and affect us all.' Mottley, who became the first female Prime Minister of Barbados in 2018, isn't afraid to pave the way. She has implemented a plan to phase out fossil fuels and transition to 100% renewable energy by 2030. Mottley is clear about the contentious political climate that affects environmental action. 'We are at an awkward stage in the world's development,' Mottley said. 'When you hear companies and financial institutions that a year ago were still promoting the importance of climate finance all of a sudden say they don't need it and they don't believe in it anymore, you begin to wonder if this is real.' But she's also clear-eyed about what's at stake, including the fact that the historically largest polluters are often the richest nations yet don't bear the brunt of the climate crisis' impacts. Rather, less developed countries in the Global South, like Barbados, which faces rising sea levels and more frequent storms, often do. Mottley launched the Bridgetown Initiative at COP26 in 2021, as a plan to push rich countries to support developing nations in adapting to climate change by aiming to mobilize trillions of dollars in green investments. 'If we don't get this equation correct, it is going to destabilize our access to food and water, our access to security,' she said. Part of the key, she said, is in finding the 'love language' that makes conversations between opposing sides—climate activists and climate deniers—possible. 'We're not going to win all the battles in the current geopolitical climate, but we can win a battle where there is common purpose.' Mottley implored businesses and individuals to eschew apathy and indifference—and for world leaders to join in on the conversation around the climate crisis, regardless of political differences. 'The truth is that if we look back at history, we know that history doesn't move in a straight line, but it is important that we keep the trajectory and the direction moving in the right way,' Mottley said. 'There are people whose very existence depends on us finding ways of building bridges through this difficult and challenging time.' TIME Earth Awards was presented by Official Timepiece Rolex and Galvanize Climate Solutions. Contact us at letters@

Zero: How Developing Countries Keep Acting on Climate
Zero: How Developing Countries Keep Acting on Climate

Bloomberg

time12-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Bloomberg

Zero: How Developing Countries Keep Acting on Climate

In the time since she became Prime Minister of Barbados in 2018, Mia Mottley has become known as a moral force for action on climate change. The Bridgetown Initiative, which she launched at COP26 in 2021, transformed the conversation around climate finance – pushing rich nations to do more to support developing countries struggling with the impact of climate change. But as the US retreats from climate action, her bold vision faces new challenges. At the Sustainable Energy for All Global Forum in Barbados, she tells Akshat Rathi why she remains optimistic, and she spoke about the role of pragmatism in tackling the climate challenge.

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