Weekly RoundupFISCAL POLICYRecent turbulence in the bond markets calls for a renewed focus on fiscal policy and a reset in fiscal thinking, Gita Gopinath, the IMF’s first deputy managing director, wrote in an op-ed for the Financial Times (paywall). Gopinath says that governments cannot be the insurer of first resort for all shocks, revenues need to keep up with spending, and fiscal frameworks need strengthening. CAPACITY DEVELOPMENTThe Netherlands’ Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation Liesje Schreinemacher and the IMF's Gita Gopinath agreed to expand a capacity-development partnership in areas such as climate and debt management. Schreinemacher also announced a 7-million-euro contribution to the new IMF-Ukraine CD Fund, the largest contribution so far. Watch highlights of the announcement. GLOBALIZATIONGlobalization is not retreating due to geopolitical developments, according to an IMF staff paper. Looking at bilateral trade flows between 1948 and 2021, the paper finds that the much-debated geopolitical alignment between countries has contradictory and statistically insignificant effects on trade, depending on the level of economic development. Moreover, the economic magnitude of this effect is not as important as income or geographic distance. NATURAL DISASTERSNatural disasters are inevitable, but humanitarian and economic losses are determined largely by policy preferences and the resilience of public infrastructure. In a paper, IMF staff investigate whether corruption increases the loss of human lives caused by natural disasters. The difference between the least and most corrupt places in their 135-country sample implies a sixfold increase in the number of deaths per population caused by natural disaster in any given year. HEALTHAn IMF Note looks at how digital health records and telemedicine can improve delivery quality, access to underserved populations, and resource utilization in healthcare. It also shows how digital disease surveillance tools can identify outbreaks and track the spread of diseases, while novel digital platforms can facilitate patent licensing and international pooled procurements for better drug access in developing countries. GOVTECHDigital payments and e-procurement can significantly enhance budget transparency and expand social assistance to reach the most vulnerable, an IMF staff paper finds. Coordination between agencies, facilitated by a dedicated GovTech institution, is critical for reaping both efficiency and equity gains. |