Weekly RoundupZAMBIAIMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on Thursday welcomed an agreement between Zambia and its official creditors under the Common Framework for debt treatment. “This is a significant milestone for the Group of 20 Common Framework under which China, India, Saudi Arabia and Paris Club creditors joined forces to agree deep debt relief for Zambia,” she said in a statement. DATA GAPSThe Data Gaps Initiative “has the potential to deliver better data, leading to stronger insights and ultimately more effective policies across climate change, economic inclusion, and financial innovation,” IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told a G20 conference. She encouraged countries to go beyond GDP in their national statistics, invest in the infrastructure and capacity of collection agencies, and collaborate in filling data gaps. IMF Deputy Managing Director Bo Li gave remarks on digitally driven financial innovation. STAFF PAPERA rise in credit to firms is associated with an increase in employment growth in the short term, but employment growth declines in the medium term, according to a recent IMF staff paper looking at 24 European economies between 2000 and 2018. Boom-bust growth cycles in the aftermath of a sharp rise in corporate debt are not limited to employment growth but also extend to investment. STAFF PAPERThe share of zombie firms—businesses that are failing but manage to avoid immediate default—has been rising worldwide over the past two decades, especially since the global financial crisis and the pandemic, says a recent IMF staff paper. The incidence of zombification is lower among private firms, possibly due to their lower average survival rates. The financial performance of non-zombie firms is worse in industries populated with a greater number of zombies. Countries with stronger banks and tighter macroprudential policies tend to have fewer zombies. CAPACITY DEVELOPMENTThe European Union and IMF have launched a new phase in their capacity development partnership that will benefit all 46 sub-Saharan countries through the IMF’s six centers in the region. Sub-Saharan African is confronted with a financing squeeze that compounds shocks and elevates economic imbalances. An additional EU contribution of 25 million euros to IMF capacity development efforts in Africa will help countries navigate through uncertainty and a rocky recovery. IMF LEARNINGThe IMF recently released two new microlearning playlists on public debt management: the first one explores some fundamental concepts of public debt management, including why public debt management is important, what debt managers do, and what environments and frameworks they operate in. The second playlist covers fundamental public debt management acronyms and definitions. |