
Speaking on the sidelines of a UN conference on development financing in Seville, Cuerpo said Spain has committed to shifting up to 50% of its SDRs, or over US$6.5 billion, showcasing the country’s dedication to contributing to global economic stability and development.
SDRs are international reserve assets created by the IMF to supplement member countries’ official reserves, providing liquidity to the global economy. They are allocated to member countries in proportion to their IMF quotas and can be exchanged among governments for freely usable currencies in times of need.
“Spain will always be part of the solution, for example, with the commitment to rechannel most of our SDRs… that would benefit developing countries,” Cuerpo said.
The additional funds will go into the IMF’s Resilience and Sustainability Trust in support of the new IMF-World Bank Collaboration Framework.
Spain’s move aligns with broader efforts among donors to support countries in need, if with the notable absence of the US after Washington refused to back the summit’s plan of action hammered out over the last year.
The pre-summit “outcomes” agreement included tripling multilateral lending capacity, debt relief, a push to boost tax-to-GDP ratios to at least 15%, and shifting the special IMF money to countries that need it most.