Larry Elliott in Washington 

Russia’s war in Ukraine remains barrier to growth, says IMF chief

Kristalina Georgieva says Kyiv will need $42bn of financial support this year as G7 considers ways to use seized Russian assets
  
  

International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva speaks during a press briefing on “Global Policy Agenda” at the IMF headquarters on April 18, 2024 in Washington, DC
The IMF’s Kristalina Georgieva said the sooner the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza ended the better it would be for the global economy. Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty Images

Russia’s war with Ukraine is stoking geopolitical tensions and damaging the recovery prospects of the global economy, the head of the International Monetary Fund has warned.

Kristalina Georgieva urged an end to the two-year conflict, saying it was both a human tragedy and a barrier to growth.

As G7 finance ministers said they were looking at ways of using the almost $300bn (£240bn) of seized Russian assets to help Ukraine, the IMF managing director said support for Kyiv remained “steady and firm”. Georgieva said Ukraine would need $42bn of financial support this year.

The G7 group of leading developed countries said it would “continue working on all possible avenues by which immobilised Russian sovereign assets could be made use of to support Ukraine, consistent with international law and our respective legal systems”.

The communique released after the meeting in Washington also hinted at tougher sanctions against Iran following last weekend’s missile and drone attack on Israel.

“We will ensure close coordination of any future measure to diminish Iran’s ability to acquire, produce, or transfer weapons to support its destabilising regional activities,” the G7 said.

Most of the seized Russian assets are being held in Europe, and the European Central Bank is concerned that outright seizure would result in tit-for-tat retaliation from Moscow and may contravene international law.

One idea being pursued is to pull forward the interest payments on frozen Russian assets – estimated at between €3bn to €5bn (£2.6bn to £4.3bn) a year – so that they can be used as collateral for loans or bonds to support Ukraine.

The UK chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, said the G7 had reluctantly concluded that the war in Ukraine was not going to end any time soon and would require a longer term commitment.

Georgieva said the sooner the conflicts in Ukraine and in Gaza ended the better it would be for the global economy.

“The war in Ukraine is a tragedy for its people. Having men, women and children killed and wounded is a daily occurrence. We need to end this war for their sake and for the sake of the world economy,” she said.

Six months of fighting between Israel and Hamas had meant Gaza’s economy had been “wiped out”, Georgieva said. “Eighty per cent of it is gone. The West Bank has also been impacted.”

Speaking at a press conference at the IMF’s spring meeting, Georgieva said: “The world has grappled with multiple shocks – the pandemic, a cost of living crisis, war and conflict, and climate disasters. The twenties has already been a turbulent decade.”

Countries had acted to mitigate the impact of the shocks of the past four years, but it was now time to rebuild buffers, the IMF chief said. “Fiscal restraint is becoming more important. Countries must rebuild their fiscal resilience to be ready for the next shock.”

The IMF’s world economic outlook released this week showed the US economy was on course to grow more than three times as rapidly as the eurozone this year – 2.7% increase in gross domestic product against 0.8%. Georgieva said there were three factors that explained the disparity.

First, the US was better at harnessing innovation so that new ideas could be turned into successful businesses. There was still “work to be done” to unleash innovation in Europe, Georgieva said, citing the costs of patents in Europe compared with in the US.

Second, migration. While the record number of people coming into the US across its southern borders has become a big political issue, Georgieva said its economy was benefitting from “abundant” labour coming into the country.

It creates a domestic political problem, and not everyone who crosses the border adds positively to the economy,” she said. “But that labour supply also gives to the US another comparative advantage; wages are not pushing up, because there is no strong pressure because of a lack of labour on wage growth.”

Third, was that the US had benefitted from more favourable energy prices than Europe, where natural gas prices soared after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Georgieva said.

 

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