Australia Doubles its Contribution to Help World’s Poorest Nations

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Visit to the United States and Europe, 24 September – 8 October
September 24, 1999
Address to CEDA: Economic and Political Overview
September 29, 1999
Visit to the United States and Europe, 24 September – 8 October
September 24, 1999
Address to CEDA: Economic and Political Overview
September 29, 1999

Australia Doubles its Contribution to Help World’s Poorest Nations

NO.064

Australia Doubles its Contribution to Help World’s Poorest Nations

The Treasurer and the Minister for Foreign Affairs have announced that Australia will

make a new contribution to an initiative for the world’s poorest nations to escape

the burden of debt.

At the IMF/World Bank meetings being held in Washington DC today, the Treasurer said

that Australia would provide an extra $A35 million and more than double its existing

pledge to the Heavily-Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative.

The HIPC Initiative is a multilateral plan to provide debt relief to the world’s

poorest countries who are pursuing IMF and World Bank supported reform programs. The

additional funding is aimed at providing these countries with faster, deeper and wider

debt relief and to ensure that it more directly contributes to poverty reduction.

At the annual meetings in Washington the Treasurer said that the developed economies

had an historic opportunity to help some of the poorest nations in the world escape from

crippling debt burdens. Writing off unpayable debt will free resources for poverty

alleviation and help these countries on the path to economic growth. Australia gave its

full support to the proposed enhancements of the HIPC initiative.

The Treasurer noted that debt relief should not be at the expense of broader efforts to

reduce poverty in the developing countries. He pointed out that a lasting reduction in

debt and poverty required that nations adopt policies focused on sustained economic

growth.

The Treasurer endorsed the proposal by the IMF to partially meet its costs from

providing debt relief through the effective revaluation of its gold holdings as opposed to

open market sales of gold.

The Minister for Foreign Affairs has applauded the efforts of the International

community at the World Bank and IMF annual meetings to address the debt burdens faced by

the poorest developing countries.

Washington DC

27 September 1999