by Daron Acemoglu et al
The world’s poorest countries are in a development crisis and need greater access to affordable financing (Opinion, October 1; and Letters, October 11).
IDA, the World Bank’s concessional financing facility for these countries, has a proven track record for providing this support and its upcoming replenishment is a moment for the international community to match their stated concern with a stepped-up financial contribution. We urge finance ministers of the G20 countries to lead this effort and increase contributions to the 21st replenishment of the International Development Association (IDA21).
IDA has served the world’s poorest countries for over 60 years, but it has never been more vital. IDA borrowing countries continue to struggle in the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic and other crises that have halted decades of progress in poverty reduction and human development. The World Bank forecasts that nearly one-third of low-income countries will have lower per capita incomes in 2026 than in 2019. Of the UN’s sustainable development goals, goal 1 was to “end poverty in all its manifestations by 2030”. Current projections show that nearly 600mn people will remain in extreme poverty by that date.
As a group of economists who have devoted significant parts of our careers to the eradication of extreme poverty, we believe that IDA is particularly well suited to help low-income countries accelerate progress. IDA’s financing is tailored to the specific needs and capacities of each country. It is delivered through recipient governments, ensuring ownership and alignment with national priorities.
Most importantly, as other sources of external financing for the poorest countries have been pulled back in recent years, IDA has stepped up, nearly doubling its commitments to low-income countries in response to the Covid crisis, and maintaining average annual financing commitments of nearly $35bn per year over the last three years.
Over the past decade, IDA has been able to increase its volume of assistance mainly by leveraging flat donor contributions with progressively larger volumes of borrowed funds and recycled repayments of past loans. That model is no longer sustainable and without an increase in donor contributions IDA will have to reduce its annual financing commitments or offer less favourable terms to its borrowers, neither of which is appropriate in the current context.
That is why we call on G20 members to increase their contributions in IDA21 by at least 20 per cent, which would enable IDA to maintain its annual financing commitments. It would also send a strong signal of solidarity and support to the world’s poorest countries and people and respond to the priority that African leaders attach to IDA for their recovery and development.
We thank the G20 for their attention and leadership, and we hope they will seize this historic opportunity to make a difference for the world’s poorest countries and people.
Daron Acemoglu
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USMichael Kremer
University Professor in Economics; Director of the Development Innovation Lab, University of ChicagoMavis Owusu-Gyamfi
President and CEO, African Center for Economic Transformation, Accra, GhanaJoseph Stiglitz
Columbia University, New York, NY, USMasood Ahmed
President Emeritus, Center for Global DevelopmentKY Amoako
Founder and President Emeritus, ACET, Accra, GhanaFrançois Bourguignon
Chaire émérite, Paris School of EconomicsBarbara K. Buchner
Global Managing Director, Climate Policy InitiativeHa-Joon Chang
Research Professor at the Department of Economics of SOAS, University of London and Co-Director of the Centre for Sustainable Structural Transformation (CSST)Stefan Dercon
Professor of Economic Policy at the Blavatnik School of Government and the Department of Economics, University of OxfordShantayanan Devarajan
Professor of the practice of International Development at Edmund A Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown UniversityCharles Kenny
Senior Fellow, Center for Global DevelopmentJustin Lin
Dean, Institute of New Structural Economics, Peking UniversityIsaac M Mbiti
Associate Professor, of Public Policy and Economics, Frank Batten School of Leadership & Public Policy, University of VirginiaJosé Antonio Ocampo
Professor the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, and former United Nations Under-Secretary GeneralDani Rodrik
Ford Foundation Professor of International Political Economy, Kennedy School of Government at Harvard UniversityJeffrey Sachs
University Professor and Director, Center for Sustainable Development, Columbia UniversityLord Nicholas Stern
IG Patel Chair of Economics and Government London School of Economics and Political ScienceLawrence H Summers
Charles W Eliot University Professor and President Emeritus at Harvard UniversityAndrés Velasco
Dean, School of Public Policy, London School of Economics and Political ScienceGernot Wagner
Climate Economist, Columbia Business School, Columbia UniversityLeonard Wantchekon
James Madison Professor of Political Economy and Professor of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton UniversityErnesto Zedillo
Director of the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, Professor of International Economics and Politics, Professor of International and Area Studies, Yale University / Former President of Mexico
Citation:
Acemoglu, Daron et al. “Letter: G20 must step up aid to world’s poorest countries.” Financial Times (15 October 2024).