Why Countries Must Cooperate on Carbon Prices(G20 INDONESIA MEDIA CENTER/M RISYAL HIDAYAT) Removing trade barriers, especially for food and fertilizers, could go a long way to counter the suffering of hundreds of millions of people, Kristalina Georgieva said in a speech at the G20 leaders’ summit in Bali on Tuesday. The IMF managing director said that COVID, the war in Ukraine and climate disasters on all continents have led to slower global growth, higher prices, tighter financial conditions and a rise in poverty and hunger. “This is hard for everybody, but especially for emerging market and developing economies.” The G20 could do a lot to improve the prospects for the world economy by removing trade barriers, lowering debt burdens and investing in resilience, Georgieva said. “We must not allow protectionism to take root—and the world to drift into separate blocs.” A divided world would lose at least 1.5 percent of GDP annually, and the cost would be twice as high for open economies that depend on international cooperation, according to calculations by IMF staff. “We can turn the tide and prevent sleepwalking into a world that is poorer and less secure,” Georgieva said. Kristalina Georgieva also gave a speech about global challenges to leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Cambodia and spoke to Reuters about the costs of fragmentation. (GETTY IMAGES/ESDELVAL) Climate change poses acute risks to Costa Rica, with natural disasters subtracting half a percent from the Caribbean nation’s gross domestic product every year for the past three decades and adding to budget pressures. This week Costa Rica became the first country to benefit from the IMF’s Resilience and Sustainability Facility to support long-term reforms to strengthen climate resilience. In a Country Focus interview, Costa Rica’s finance minister, Nogui Acosta Jaén, said the new program would help the country to assess the risks climate change poses to public investment projects and mitigate costs over the next few years. "We intend to leverage this Fund-supported climate change reform program to issue environmental, social and governance bonds," he says. "We also believe that this can set an example for neighboring countries or those facing similar climate risks, as the RSF is an instrument that responds to a real need and has a significant impact in the medium- and long-term." Learn more about IMF's Resilience and Sustainability Facility to support countries address longer-term challenges, including those related to climate change. (ADOBE STOCK/DMYTRO) This week, the global population passed 8 billion. The progression from 7 to 8 billion people took a mere 12 years, conjuring up long-standing fears associated with rapid population growth, write Harvard’s David Bloom and Leo Zucker in an F&D online exclusive. But the most formidable demographic challenge facing the world is population aging. Thoughtful preparedness can enable countries to meet the challenge and take advantage of the opportunities presented by demographic change, they write. “Population aging presents, together with its challenges, opportunities for societies to reorient and reinvigorate.” Finance & Development, the IMF's flagship magazine and online editorial platform, publishes cutting-edge analysis and insight on the latest trends and research in international finance, economics, and development. It is written by both IMF staff and prominent international experts, and is read by leading policymakers, academics, economic practitioners, and other decisionmakers around the world. Want to get a print copy delivered to your home or office? |