IMF agrees to adjust surcharges on loans

arbados has secured a huge win on the international stage with the recent decision by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to adjust surcharges on loans, offering much-needed relief to small and microstates that are heavily burdened by financial pressures.

Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Kerrie Symmonds shared the news during a meeting with the Barbados Coalition of Service Industries (BCSI) on Wednesday, noting this victory can be credited to the persistent advocacy of the country.

“Yesterday, the IMF accepted that the thresholds for the surcharges would be raised and that the ceiling would come down and that therefore it makes life easier for small and micro-states like ours,” Symmonds said.

The move aligns with Prime Minister Mia Mottley’s push against the unfairness of surcharge policies, which, according to Symmonds, disproportionately affect smaller countries already burdened by high debt levels.

“We pay higher interest rates for our loans than the people in the metropolitan cities pay… we’re solving some of the same problems. They may want to have a way of adjusting to rising tides… battle with water shortages and drought conditions…. We’ve got those same problems too but we’re paying more than they pay for the solution,” he said.

Further noting the importance of this development and referencing the island’s global influence, the minister said, “Barbados has once again now been recognised internationally as… punching above our weight.”

“We have pointed out the injustice of the arrangement and that for those of us who are on the cusp of a climate crisis, we take in the blows every day,” he said. (SM)

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