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U.S.-Based Organizations: Full Debt Cancellation for Haiti Needed Immediately
Announced IMF/World Bank debt relief program will provide only limited relief, with painful conditions
Sep 20, 2006
The IMF’s Executive Board announced that Haiti qualifies for its
Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC) program that also
applies to World Bank debt. This is a step in the right direction,
but Haiti faces at least two more years of delay before it reaches
completion point and is eligible for 100% cancellation. Several U.S.-
based organizations working on poverty and human rights in Haiti are
concerned that the IMF and World Bank debt relief program will
require painful economic measures that will make Haitians, the
poorest people in the Americas, even more vulnerable to death and
disease. In the meantime, the Haitian government will be forced to
make $60 million a year in debt payments, money that would be better
spent tackling Haiti’s dire health and education problems.
Haiti’s per capita gross domestic product (GDP) has shrunk 40% since
1980. Most Haitians struggle to survive on less than $1 per day. Life
expectancy is only 53 years and nearly a quarter of children under 5
years old are chronically malnourished. Less than half of primary
school-aged children attend school. Most people do not have access to
clean water.
“Children will die of preventable water-borne diseases today,
tomorrow and every day for months and years to come because of past
restrictions imposed by the IMF and other lending institutions.
Children in desperate need cannot wait three years for the IMF’s
process to be completed,” said Nicole Lee, Operations Director of
TransAfrica Forum. “Immediate debt relief would save lives
immediately.”
Before Haiti receives full debt cancellation under HIPC, the IMF
mandates that it undertake “further macroeconomic, structural and
social reforms.” Past IMF “reforms” imposed on Haiti – including
curtailing support for agricultural production and cutting social
spending – have worsened Haiti’s chronic poverty.
“We are worried that the IMF’s medicine may be worse than the
disease,” said Neil Watkins, National Coordinator of the Jubilee USA
Network. “The HIPC conditionalities will aggravate the very problems
that debt cancellation is supposed to tackle. Haiti needs immediate
debt cancellation now.”
Almost half of Haiti’s $1.3 billion external debt is for loans made
to the corrupt and brutal dictatorships of Francois and Jean-Claude
Duvalier. “The banks let the Duvaliers use loans for private armies
and Manhattan shopping trips. Now Haiti’s hungry poor must tighten
their belts to pay the bill.” said Brian Concannon Jr. Director of
the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti. “Haiti’s debt is
onerous, but it is also odious.”
Over half of Haiti’s public external debt is owed to the Inter-
American Development Bank (IDB), which participates in HIPC but has
not yet followed the lead of the G-8, the IMF, and the World Bank to
provide 100% debt stock cancellation. Monika Kalra Varma, Acting
Director of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights,
notes that “the IDB has been considering a program that would fully
cancel Haiti’s debt to it, but it needs to move from consideration
into action, now.”
HR 888, a resolution introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives
by Rep. Maxine Waters of California has 60 co-sponsors and would
commit the U.S. Government to immediate and complete debt
cancellation for Haiti.
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