The United States on
Tuesday proposed that the International Monetary Fund write off some
$100m in debt it is owed by Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to free up
more resources for those countries, the hardest hit by the Ebola
outbreak.
The debt relief should enable the three impoverished
West African countries to spend more on government services and to
support their economies as they cope with the devastating epidemic, US
Treasury officials told Reuters.
The countries now owe the IMF a
combined $372m, of which $55m comes due over the next two years,
officials said on condition of anonymity.
"The International
Monetary Fund has already played a critical role as a first responder,
providing economic support to countries hardest hit by Ebola", US
treasury secretary Jack Lew said in a statement issued to Reuters.
"Today we are asking the IMF to expand that support by providing debt
relief for Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Guinea."
The
US proposal must still be approved by the IMF's other 187 member
countries. Lew will recommend the move to the Group of 20 leading
economies at their meeting in Brisbane, Australia this week.
The
United States proposed that the money for the $100m in IMF debt relief
should come from a special trust fund set up for poor countries coping
with catastrophic natural disasters, which now contains about $150m of
the IMF's own resources.
The so-called post-catastrophe debt relief trust was first used for Haiti in the aftermath of its 2010 earthquake.
In
September, the IMF approved $130m in aid to the three countries to help
them deal with the economic impact from the Ebola virus, which has
sapped their growth, cut into tax revenues and affected exports and
other industries.
The IMF estimated last month that the three
countries faced financing gaps of about $300m this year and could also
face large financing needs in 2015 as their economic situation
deteriorates.
Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea are among West
Africa's poorest countries and the hardest hit by the worst Ebola
epidemic since the disease was identified in 1976. The virus has killed
at least 4 950 people out of about 13 240 cases this year, according to
the World Health Organisation.
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