Yellen, in prepared remarks to a U.S. House of Representatives
Appropriations subcommittee, said that the G20 Debt Service
Suspension Initiative for poor countries and a new debt
restructuring "Common Framework" both need funding from
Congress.
"Without new funding, the United States could be forced to delay
the multilateral debt process under the Common Framework and
charge much higher interest rates on DSSI debt service
suspensions," Yellen said.
Yellen said the Treasury's budget request for fiscal 2022
includes funding for these initiatives as well as U.S.
contribution commitments to international financial
institutions, such as the World Bank's International Development
Association fund for the poorest countries.
She said the budget plan also includes funding for the
first-ever U.S. contribution to the IMF's Poverty Reduction and
Growth Trust, a fund that aids poor countries. It also would
allow the United States to lend IMF Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)
through the trust to poorer countries that need them.
The IMF is working on a $650 billion distribution of foreign
exchange assets in the form of SDRs, the IMF's unit of exchange,
to all of its members later this year. To spend those SDRs,
recipients would need to exchange them for the underlying hard
currency with a willing country.
Yellen was questioned by Republican Representative Guy
Reschenthaler about whether the IMF SDR issuance would benefit
U.S. adversaries, including China, Russia and Iran.
Yellen said that these countries would be allocated SDRs as IMF
members. China and Russia would be unlikely to want to spend
them, while Iran, facing widespread international sanctions,
would be unlikely to find a willing source of exchange.
Asked if Myanmar, where the military seized power in February,
would use its SDRs, she said: "No, Burma will not be able to use
its SDRs. When a government has taken power by force, the IMF
will not transact with it, unless a majority of IMF shareholders
say they recognize the government, and that hasn't happened."
Yellen also said that the Treasury has discussed with Chinese
authorities the need for more Chinese state lending entities to
participate in G20 debt relief efforts for poor countries
She also told lawmakers that Treasury’s budget request includes
roughly $1 billion to help developing countries adapt to climate
change, including expanding clean energy and conserving rain
forests, which absorb carbon emissions.
(Reporting by David Lawder, additional reporting by Jason
LangeEditing by Chizu Nomiyama and Jonathan Oatis)
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