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Amid COVID 19 IMF Hands $396M to Jordan While Inner City Press Asks of Disparities

By Matthew Russell Lee, Patreon
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SDNY COURTHOUSE, May 15 – 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 May 21 amid the Coronavirus crisis on Jordan, the IMF has announced, "The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved on May 20, 2020, Jordan’s request for emergency financial assistance under the Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI) equivalent to SDR 291.55 million (about US$396 million, or 85 percent of quota). The purchase under the RFI is projected to cover about a quarter of Jordan’s external financing needs stemming from the COVID-19 shock. The rest is expected to be covered by Jordan’s development partners and by targeting smaller accumulation of reserves than under the arrangement under Extended Fund Facility (EFF) approved by the IMF on March 25, 2020. Jordan has taken proactive efforts since the COVID-19 outbreak to protect safety of its citizens and refugees. It has implemented a strict curfew, prioritized healthcare spending, and took steps to cushion the impact of the shock on businesses and households. Despite these efforts, Jordan’s near-term economic outlook has worsened considerably since the IMF approved a US$ 1.3 billion four-year EFF for Jordan in March (See Press Release No. 20/107). Due to the COVID-19 crisis and the strict lockdown measures to contain it, Jordan’s 2020 output is expected to contract, fiscal deficit is expected to widen, public debt to increase, and a US$1.5 billion balance of payments gap to emerge.The RFI and other external financing catalyzed by it will ease the external financing constraint and allow the authorities to finance essential spending on health and social protection and avoid loss in official reserves. The authorities are committed to transparency and accountability for emergency spending." Inner City Press has previously reported about Jordan and the W.H.O., and will have more on this. This is more than to Afghanistan, for example.  On April 28 the UN disclosed a case of UN sexual abuse by its UNAMA in Afghanistan; Guterres and his spokesperson Stephane Dujarric and Melissa Fleming refused that day and this to answer any Press questions about it. This as there is still no disclosure of the San Tome and other business of  Pedro Guimarães e Melo De Oliveira Guterres, the son of Antonio Guterres whose UN is now spreading COVID-19 in South Sudan with a UN bus with no social distancing.

   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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