(Credit: IMF Photo/Lewis Joly) A combination of record-high debts, elevated interest rates and weak economic growth is making it harder for countries to meet their spending needs, IMF First Deputy Managing Director Gita Gopinath told a seminar on how to boost growth. By 2030, emerging markets and developing economies will need around $3 trillion in additional spending—about 5.5 percent of gross domestic product—to finance their development goals and the climate transition. “Prioritizing spending so it goes to areas that raise productivity is critical,” Gopinath said. For Canada, that means investing in early learning and childcare, the country’s deputy prime minister, Chrystia Freeland, said. Almost 86 percent of women are working because of policies aimed at supporting young families—the highest women’s labor force participation rate in the country’s history. Germany’s government is pushing reforms to labor and energy markets, according to the country’s finance minister, Christian Lindner. He told the seminar some developing economies could increase the tax burden by 8-9 percent of GDP and still be efficient, in contrast to many advanced economies where the tax take is high already. “In the case of Germany…we have no problem with tax revenues. We have a problem with prioritizing.” Egypt’s challenges are different. Sixty percent of its population is under 30 but a third lives in poverty. Tackling informality, increasing tax efficiency through digitalization, and ensuring tax compliance are all important. But Egypt’s finance minister Mohamed Maait said that traditional solutions might not always work or be possible politically. “Any solution would impact people’s pockets.” |