Weekly RoundupFUND FINANCINGTo better support the Fund’s members in a particularly challenging and uncertain economic environment, the IMF Board agreed to temporarily increase the limits on members’ annual and cumulative access to Fund resources in the General Resources Account. For a period of 12 months, this raises the annual limit in the GRA from 145 to 200 percent of quota and the cumulative limit from 435 to 600 percent of quota. FOOD SHOCK WINDOWThe IMF Board has approved a disbursement under the Food Shock Window of about $114.8 million to South Sudan, where 8.3 million people, or two-thirds of the population, face acute food insecurity. This emergency financing will provide South Sudan with fiscal space to address food insecurity while maintaining social and growth-enhancing spending as well as boosting reserves. VIDEO DISCUSSIONHow is the war affecting countries in the Caucasus and Central Asia? IMF Deputy Managing Director Bo Li discussed the regional impact with Erik Berglöf, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank’s chief economist, and Carnegie Senior Fellow Paul Stronski. They also explored how countries in the region can prepare for potential shocks and sustain their ongoing economic transformation. STAFF PAPERThe causes and consequences of supply-side disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic have been the subject of intense debate. A recent IMF staff paper finds that supply shocks weighed negatively on the global recovery and contributed positively to inflation. Prior to Russia's war in Ukraine, supply disruptions subtracted between 0.5 and 1.2 percent from global value added in 2021, while adding about 1 percent to core inflation that same year. STAFF PAPERFirms play an important role in shaping income inequality, given that wages represent a significant proportion of household income. A recent IMF staff paper shows that capital-account liberalization increases wage inequality between firms, as wages grow faster at high-paying firms while slowing down at firms at the lower portion of the wage distribution, though the impact depends on country and industry characteristics. |