|
WORLD BANK AND IMF REACH $55 BILLION DEBT DEAL, DISCUSS
TRADE
On September 25th, the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund reached an agreement on the debt relief program announced at
July’s G8 Summit. In the $55 billion debt deal, the institutions will cancel
debts owed by some of the poorest countries in the world by the end of 2005.
“This is a moment of real opportunity,” Paul Wolfowitz, the newly appointed
president of the World Bank, stated. “The path to complete debt relief has now
been cleared.'' The 38 countries that have been designated for 100% debt relief
will be able to take funds previously designated for interest payments and use
them instead to invest in their own people.
The World Bank and IMF also discussed fair trade, emphasizing that debt relief
is merely the first step in the process to aid the impoverished. Trade barriers,
including subsidies and tariffs, remain as obstacles for developing countries.
Updated October 14, 2005
+ TAKE ACTION
|