*From:* Spina, Christopher
*Sent:* Wednesday, July 15, 2015 4:56 PM
*To:* Spina, Christopher
*Subject:* Democratic Lawmakers Urge IMF to Revisit Jamaica’s Economic
Program



[image: cid:[email protected]]
<http://democrats.financialservices.house.gov/>

*For Immediate Release

                           Contacts: **Christopher Spina*
<[email protected]>
* 202-226-3904 <202-226-3904> July 15, 2015

                                             **Nina Smith*
<[email protected]>* 202-226-9079 <202-226-9079>*





*Democratic Lawmakers Urge IMF to Revisit Jamaica’s Economic Program*



*WASHINGTON, D.C.* – Five leading Democratic lawmakers today called on
President Obama to urge the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to revisit
the terms of Jamaica’s current economic program, which to date has been
characterized by continued low growth, a decline in social indicators, high
unemployment and threats to social cohesion.



The House lawmakers did so in a letter
<http://democrats.financialservices.house.gov/uploadedfiles/07.15.2015_house_letter_to_president_obama_re_jamaica.pdf>
led by *Congresswoman Maxine Waters* (D-CA), the Ranking Member of the
House Financial Services Committee, which has jurisdiction over U.S.
participation in the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Waters
was joined by *Congresswoman Yvette Clarke* (D-NY), *Congressman Gregory
Meeks* (D-NY), *Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee* (D-TX), and *Congressman
Charles Rangel* (D-NY).



Currently in its third year of an economic program backed by the IMF, the
World Bank and the Inter-America Development Bank, Jamaica continues to
have one of the world’s highest debt burdens, with government interest
payments crowding out important growth investments in infrastructure and
human capital.



In their letter, the lawmakers express concern that Jamaica’s “enormous
debt burden remains a major obstacle to growth, and the extreme fiscal
austerity imposed on the country has proven counterproductive.”



The government has been expected to maintain a high degree of austerity,
with a required primary surplus of 7.5 percent of GDP, the highest average
primary surplus in the world outside of major oil producers.



The House members in their letter ask the President to urge the
international financial institutions to revisit the terms of Jamaica’s loan
program in order “to provide the government the fiscal space it desperately
needs to boost growth and address continued high unemployment and poverty.”



A copy of the letter is below and can be found online here
<http://democrats.financialservices.house.gov/uploadedfiles/07.15.2015_house_letter_to_president_obama_re_jamaica.pdf>
.





July 14, 2015



President Barack Obama

The White House

Washington, D.C., 20500



Dear Mr. President:



As members of Congress who care deeply about strengthening our relations
with our Caribbean neighbors, we were delighted by your decision to travel
to Jamaica in April and meet with Prime Minister Simpson-Miller and other
heads of government of the Caribbean Community.  We were pleased to hear in
your remarks to your Caribbean counterparts the emphasis you placed on
deepening our “cooperation in economic growth.”



Indeed, anemic economic growth has plagued the region for decades and has
led to declining living standards and rising unemployment.   The Caribbean
nation perhaps most affected by sustained economic stagnation is Jamaica
itself.



A major factor contributing to this stagnation has been Jamaica’s enormous
debt burden (with a current debt-to-GDP ratio of nearly 140%), and the
extreme fiscal measures that have been adopted to cover the country’s
substantial interest payments to international financial creditors.



In your remarks shortly after your bilateral meeting with Prime Minister
Simpson-Miller you stated that it is important to find ways to “spur growth
and not just put the squeeze on folks” and noted that international
financial institutions need to show greater flexibility and “accommodate
the interests of countries who have a strong plan for growth.”



We very much agree.  In fact, when we first learned of Jamaica’s dire
economic straights a few years ago, we began to work closely with IMF
Managing Director Christine Lagarde; Dr. Peter Phillips, Jamaica’s Minister
of Finance and Planning; and Governor Brian Wynter of the Bank of Jamaica
to try to find a way forward for the embattled country.



We helped to communicate to the IMF what Jamaica was willing to do to get a
loan package in order to help save the economy.  We very much appreciate
that the IMF, the World Bank, and the Inter-American Development Bank were
able to work so hard at the time to come to an agreement.  Unfortunately,
more now needs to be done.



This is why we now write to ask that you to continue to show your support
for the country of Jamaica by urging these institutions – the country’s
primary external public creditors – to provide the government the fiscal
space it desperately needs to boost growth and address continued high
unemployment and poverty.



According to the IMF Executive Board’s most recent review, the Jamaican
government’s performance under the IMF program is “on track and has
remained strong.”  But the policies implemented under the program have
dampened rather than spurred growth.  Jamaica now has the world’s most
austere national budget – with a 7.5% primary surplus last year and for at
least the next three years as part of the current IMF program.  Its
interest burden is among the world’s highest (8% of GDP) and interest
payments to multilateral financial institutions surpassed multilateral loan
disbursements in 2012 and 2013. Last year, Jamaica paid $136 million more
to the IMF than it received from it.



We entirely agree with you, as you stated in Kingston, that the best way
for a country to reduce its debt is through growth.  But the country's
enormous debt burden remains a major obstacle to growth, and the extreme
fiscal austerity imposed on the country has proven counterproductive.



Jamaica’s crushing debt burden has contributed to it being the only country
in the Western Hemisphere to have had negative growth in per capita income
for the past two decades.  The country’s recovery continues to stall.  In
the last quarter of 2014, Jamaica’s growth rate fell 1.4%.  The
unemployment rate stands at 14.2% – higher than during the global recession
– and the nation’s poverty rate has doubled since 2007.  To make matters
worse, austerity measures have led to deep cuts in critical health and
education programs.



The time has come to revisit the terms of Jamaica's IMF program.  We
believe that the IMF should lower Jamaica's budgetary surplus threshold,
among other measures, and that the IMF and the multilateral development
banks should urgently consider extending the maturities of the government’s
current loans.



We respectfully ask you to heed the call of Caribbean civil society leaders
and help bring relief to Jamaica before the country’s social and economic
ills become too deeply entrenched.





Sincerely,



Maxine
Waters

Yvette D. Clarke

Sheila Jackson Lee

Gregory W. Meeks

Charles B. Rangel



cc:           Secretary of the Treasury Jacob J. Lew





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