How to rebuild the global economy | Kristalina Georgieva

66,503 views ・ 2020-05-22

TED


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00:12
Chris Anderson: I get now to introduce
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one of the most powerful women in the world.
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I mean, if we are to escape from the mess that we're in right now,
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she is going to play a major part in helping us do that.
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She's the head of the International Monetary Fund,
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a delight to welcome here Kristalina Georgieva.
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Kristalina, welcome.
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Kristalina Georgieva: Great to be with you, Chris.
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Thank you for having me.
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CA: So you just took on this role late last year,
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and within four months, boom, COVID arrives.
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That is one heck of an introduction to a new job.
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How are you doing?
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KG: Well, I find strength in action.
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And at the Fund,
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we have been, from day one on this crisis,
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leaning forward with everything we have
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to provide lifelines to countries,
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and that means to people and businesses.
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Already, we have received over 90 requests
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and we have offered, to 56 countries,
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critical financial packages.
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CA: You've described this pandemic as a crisis like no other.
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In what way a crisis like no other?
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KG: Truly like no other.
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First, never before
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we will inflict on the economy consciously so much pain
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to fight a virus and save lives.
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We are asking businesses not to produce
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and consumers not to go out and consume.
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At the Fund, we labeled this "the Great Lockdown."
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Second,
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never before
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there would be such a rapid change of fortunes
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practically for everybody around the world.
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In January, I was in Davos,
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talking about "anemic growth," growth of three percent.
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In April, during our spring meetings, it was already minus three percent.
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In January,
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we predicted 160 countries to have positive income per capita growth.
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Now it is 170 countries with negative income per capita growth.
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Now this, we call "the Great Reversal."
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Very painful.
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And three, uncertainty.
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We always live with uncertainty, Chris,
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but this time,
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it is the uncertainty of a novel coronavirus
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that policymakers have to integrate.
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We at the Fund combine epidemiological projections
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with our traditional macroeconomic modeling
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to see through that uncertainty.
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I must add to this,
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I very much hope that when we go on the other side in the recovery,
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we can use a new term and call it "the Great Transformation."
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Make the world a better place.
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CA: Well, I'll be excited to come on to that in a bit.
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But in this moment of responding to the crisis,
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the main tool that seems to have been executed,
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at least by the rich countries,
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has been this massive economic stimulus,
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to the tune of trillions of dollars.
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Is that a wise response?
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KG: It is a necessity.
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And you don't hear the Fund often telling countries,
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"Please, spend.
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Spend as much as you can."
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And that is what we do now.
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We do add to that,
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"And keep the receipts.
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Don't lose accountability to the citizens, to the tax payers."
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The reason financial injection is necessary,
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these fiscal measures of almost nine trillion dollars are necessary,
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is because when the economy is standing still,
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unless there is help,
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unless there is monetary policy stimulus,
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firms are going to go massively bankrupt,
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people would be unemployed,
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the economy would be scarred.
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When we go to the other side,
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this scarring is going to make the recovery much more difficult.
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So that is a wise thing to do,
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and it helps the fact that central banks in major economies
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have been acting in a synchronized manner
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and that fiscal stimulus came really, really fast.
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This is how we see people being able to go through this
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very, very tough time.
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CA: But how far can it go?
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Because it's been described, in a sense, as "printing money" --
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governments are issuing more and more bonds
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that have to paid back at some point.
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There's this term, in economics, of the Minsky moment,
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where things can go very well for a while,
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as everyone believes that, you know,
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that the train can keep running,
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the cycle can keep turning,
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you know, that governments have all this money.
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At some point, though, doesn't that break down?
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Do you worry that we may be nearing a Minsky moment,
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where, like Michael in Mary Poppins
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grabs his tuppence and starts a run on the bank.
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Is there stress in the international financial system now
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that concerns you,
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that makes you feel that we may be running out of headroom?
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KG: Of course, this cannot go on forever.
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I, for one, have trust in our scientists,
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I think we will see breakthroughs,
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and we will see also people in businesses
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getting accustomed to social distancing,
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to micromeasures that protect from spreading the disease.
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We have seen very massive injection in health systems,
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so hospitals can actually treat people that are coming for help.
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Obviously, if it is to go for a very long time,
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we would be worried.
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For now,
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what we are projecting
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is that there would be a gradual reopening --
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we see it already happening in a number of countries.
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And we project for next year, 2021,
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a partial recovery.
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Not a full recovery, unfortunately,
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but coming to a better place.
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Now, what helps us
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is something that I don't particularly love,
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but I see it as a positive feature --
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very low interest rates,
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in some cases, negative --
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that allows this injection of fiscal measures and liquidity
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to be sustained over a number of years.
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And for now, we do not see on the horizon
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any return to increase in interest rates.
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So low for longer,
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and that is, in that environment, a helpful feature.
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CA: I mean, the financial crisis of 2008
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came perilously close to breaking the entire financial system --
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arguably, it did that.
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By most people's calculation,
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this is a far worse impact to the economy overall.
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Did the world learn something from 2008
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that has helped us so far be resilient this time?
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KG: What the world learned is that the financial system
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has to be tested
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and then strengthened to withstand shocks.
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And that is helping us tremendously today.
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The banking system is resilient,
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and even in the nonbanking financial institutions,
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there is more attention paid
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to how far can you go without running into trouble.
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I would say,
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if you look around the world,
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the most important lesson then was "build resilience to shocks."
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Those who have done it cope now better.
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And those who have not done it are in a much tougher spot.
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And actually, for the Fund,
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what we are praying
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is that we will come out of this crisis with this lesson about resilience
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being spread beyond the banking system,
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so we actually have this crisis-management mindset
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for a world that is inevitably going to be more shock-prone,
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because of climate
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and also because of the sheer density of economic and social life on our planet.
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CA: In your role,
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you're paying special attention to the situation in developing countries.
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And it does seem that they're facing a really terrible situation right now.
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Many of them have significant debt denominated in dollars.
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In the current crisis,
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their currencies are depreciating against the dollar,
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making it nigh impossible for them to execute the kind of injection,
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stimulus injections,
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that the rich countries are doing
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and seems to be the only way out.
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So that seems like a really dangerous cycle.
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Is there any way to break that cycle?
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KG: Well, let me first separate
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countries that have built strong fundamentals.
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And now in this crisis,
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as we are receiving incoming data,
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not very many, but there are still some positive surprises,
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and they come from countries that have built stronger buffers,
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stronger fundamentals,
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have been more disciplined during good times.
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But indeed, we do see
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quite a number of emerging markets, developing countries,
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faced with multiple pressures.
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They had the hit from the coronavirus,
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many of them with weak health systems.
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Then, they have the high level of indebtedness,
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from before the crisis,
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which creates a much more difficult environment for them.
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Then, many of them are commodity exporters.
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Commodity prices, oil price,
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they went down very dramatically,
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that hits them again.
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Many rely on remittances.
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Remittances shrunk some 20 to 30 percent.
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And then you have a number of countries that are highly dependent on tourism.
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Tourism is the hardest hit sector, or one of the hardest hit.
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So, very tough for these countries,
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but this is why institutions like mine have been wisely created.
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The IMF, the World Bank, the regional development banks,
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we work very closely together in this crisis.
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The IMF, fortunately,
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that was one of the lessons from the 2008-2009 crisis --
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make sure that in the center of the financial safety net is an IMF
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with financial strength.
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We have four times more money to lend today
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than we had then.
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From 250 billion to one trillion dollars.
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And of course,
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we are deploying these funds
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exactly for the countries that need us the most.
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And we did one more thing.
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With David Malpass, the president of the World Bank,
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we called for a debt moratorium for the poorest countries
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to their official bilateral creditors.
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And people tend to say, "Oh, we don't work together,
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it's not good enough."
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But here is an area where we made this call in late March,
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and in mid-April,
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the G20 agreed on this moratorium.
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Amazing, we had the Paris Club, China,
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the Gulf countries,
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all agreeing that we should not suffocate the poorest countries
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by asking them to pay their debts
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when their economies are standing still.
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CA: Is it possible that some developing countries
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are overdoing the lockdown policy?
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I mean, if large numbers of your citizens are already struggling to stay alive,
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isn't it almost like a death sentence to order them not to leave their homes?
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KG: Well, Chris, one of the most heartbreaking conversations I would have
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is with leaders of countries where they have to stare in the face
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a choice of people dying from the virus
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or dying from hunger.
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And it is a very dramatic situation for them.
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Where you have a very large part of your economy
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being informal,
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where people live hand-to-mouth every day,
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the lockdowns we have in advanced economies
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are not quite applicable,
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but even there,
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countries are doing really well in social distancing
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to the extent it is possible.
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Many of the countries in Africa
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were very early to step up preventive measures.
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Why?
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They learned from the Ebola, they learned from prior crises
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that hygiene,
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taking any measure you can really helps.
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So again, I cannot stress enough
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how important is solidarity with these countries.
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How important it is for my institution to be there for them in a timely manner.
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And we do it.
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CA: Whitney.
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Whitney Pennington Rogers: Hi there, thank you,
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this is a wonderful conversation,
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and we're starting to see some questions coming from the community.
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The first one we have is from Bill Elkus,
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and it's a follow-up to something you were mentioning earlier,
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related to the stimulus, Kristalina.
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What are the prospects for inflation from such a large stimulus?
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KG: At this point,
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we are not worried about inflation in advanced economies
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and in the majority of emerging market economies.
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We do worry about inflation
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in countries that have weak fundamentals,
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no access to foreign exchange easily,
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where the only way to address the crisis
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is our help
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or their central banks printing more money.
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And sometimes it's a combination of those two.
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Why I don't worry about inflation in advanced economies?
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Because countries that have their hard currency
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are putting liquidity in place,
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but at the same time,
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they're not seeing a big expansion of demand
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and prices being pushed up.
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So for these countries,
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at least for the observable future,
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we don't see a way of going, like after the Second World War,
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in inflation jumping up.
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The consumers are not consuming so aggressively,
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demand is not that strong,
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and these are societies where there is a lot of maturity
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in how they exercise their policy options.
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But if you are a poor country,
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that out of desperation, with no access to markets,
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no access to hard currency,
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ought to somehow put money supply enough,
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then inflation is going to be there.
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A very extreme case is Zimbabwe,
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and I do worry there may be other countries.
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So this is why we are so determined to engage with these countries early.
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And also look at some of the high-debt countries.
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Would it be necessary, on a country-by-country basis,
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to restructure debts
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to prevent that moving in a desperate direction?
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WPR: Thank you.
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And we have one more question that I wanted to share from our community.
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This is from Keith Yamashita,
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and it's about how we all can be involved in some of this change.
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"You are tasked with macro-economic and funding efforts.
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What should we do as citizens to help renewal and recovery?"
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KG: Well, it is incredibly important for all of us citizens --
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and aside of being the head of the IMF, I am also a global citizen --
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that we are to bring that notion
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of solidarity in a moment of crisis.
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I loved the way this segment
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was musically backed, and it was "Lean on Me."
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It is very important that we do create that sense --
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"we are in this together, we will get through it together."
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And please, speak up on that.
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I was, for many years, crisis commissioner,
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and one thing I learned is that the majority of people
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are positive, good people.
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You can lean on them.
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And there is a minority that is hateful and fearful
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and also very loud.
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So, good people, speak up.
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Spread that sense of "we are in this together,
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we'll get through it together."
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WPR: Thank you. I'll come back later with other questions.
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CA: Kristalina, I'd love to expand on that
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and just ask you a bit more about leadership, actually.
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You know, when people think of the nations that have performed best,
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they often refer to --
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when I say best, best in response to the current pandemic --
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they often refer to Germany, New Zealand,
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South Korea, Taiwan, Denmark and Norway.
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20:05
When they think of those that have performed worst,
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they often think of Spain, Italy, the UK, Belgium,
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Sweden, Iran, Brazil, Russia
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and the United States.
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All of that second group are run by men,
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all but one of the first group are run by women.
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Is that a coincidence?
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KG: Well, now,
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speaking a bit subjectively as a woman,
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I do believe that women are great to lead in a crisis.
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They are more likely to show empathy,
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to care about the most vulnerable people
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and to be able to speak about that.
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They are decisive.
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I can say that for myself,
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we take energy from action.
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And we don't tend to, kind of, mourn and complain
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21:11
too much.
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So there is perhaps something to be said
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about the value of gender equality for the future.
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Bring more women for this world of more crisis ahead of us.
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21:31
CA: It's obviously hard to make generalizations about gender of any kind,
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but I mean, is there also, almost, something
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21:38
about the embracing of nuance,
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21:40
that women might be better at that than men?
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Men are often, it's like, "let's win, let's conquer,"
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and in a situation like this, where it's all probabilities,
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21:50
it's like, there are so many complex dials to turn
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21:53
on this dangerous pandemic machine that we're trying to wrestle.
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22:00
I mean, are women better at handling nuance?
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KG: Let me say something, Chris.
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22:05
We need everybody,
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and we need this mixture of experience, knowledge and predisposition.
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22:12
Men and women coming together.
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22:15
I find it that it is great to have different perspectives
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22:20
when we make decisions.
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22:22
Then, the chances of making a good decision are higher.
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22:26
So we need each other,
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3283
22:30
but we also need to recognize is that yes, there are certain things,
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22:34
I have seen it time and again,
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22:37
women are more willing to find a pathway to compromise,
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22:41
they're more willing to be corrected if they're wrong.
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5965
22:47
Say, "Oh, OK, that's a good point,
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1747
22:49
let me integrate it in the way I think about it."
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22:52
And when you are in uncertainty,
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22:55
that is a huge advantage in decision-making.
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23:01
CA: So perhaps talk a bit more about your own leadership in this moment.
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23:05
I mentioned you've only recently come to this job.
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Before that, you were European Commissioner,
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23:10
you dealt with humanitarian crises in more than one part of the world.
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23:15
And in your own country, Bulgaria,
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23:16
you witnessed the wholesale transformation of the country,
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2722
23:19
both politically and economically.
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23:22
What lessons can you bring from your past experience
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23:25
to this moment?
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23:28
KG: Well, there are many things I learned.
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23:31
I was very fortunate to have these multiple experiences
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23:35
for the job I have now.
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2190
23:37
But let me highlight three.
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2501
23:40
First, how critically important it is
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4812
23:45
to prepare for a crisis.
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5539
23:51
Kind of, think of the unthinkable,
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23:53
and then act with some foresight
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5079
23:58
when a shock hits you.
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2842
24:02
You have a title for this series called "Build Back Better."
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24:09
I actually would like to modify it, if I may,
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3053
24:12
and I would talk about "Build Better Before."
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5021
24:19
Preparedness, prevention, pay off big time.
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24:24
The second --
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24:26
and not necessarily in priority, it is as important --
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3904
24:30
is collective action,
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2856
24:32
working together.
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2390
24:35
Seeking help, offering help.
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2507
24:39
Makes a huge difference in an emergency.
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4389
24:43
And the third is something I learned time and again.
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3533
24:47
We don't know our internal strength
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4627
24:52
until we are hit.
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2325
24:55
We are so resilient,
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1761
24:57
we are so able to withstand shocks,
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4957
25:02
especially when we come together,
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3201
25:05
that this always gives me this sense of optimism
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4445
25:09
that, as hard as it is, we can overcome it.
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6777
25:16
From the days when my country collapsed, the economy collapsed,
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4335
25:21
I would get up at four o'clock in the morning,
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2380
25:23
queue to buy milk for my daughter,
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3008
25:26
to the days when I would see Syrian refugees in terrible situations
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6314
25:32
helping each other,
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2270
25:35
to today, when I'm the head of the IMF,
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4031
25:39
that internal strength,
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2111
25:41
our power of resilience,
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4542
25:45
the more we are together,
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2134
25:48
the more it is amplified.
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2541
25:52
CA: Actually, could you talk a bit more about the role of the IMF,
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3118
25:55
especially as we look forward to trying to recover from this?
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3168
25:58
What specifically can your organization do
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3634
26:02
to take us forward?
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1267
26:04
KG: So there are three things that are quite unique for the IMF,
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3667
26:08
and they're really so important in a time of crisis.
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4443
26:12
The first one is to give a good diagnostic of what is happening
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4150
26:17
and what is the way forward.
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1577163
1866
26:19
Let me just say, in this crisis,
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2230
26:21
in the very first weeks,
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1800
26:23
we put together, we call it policy action tracker, for 193 countries.
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6574
26:30
What actions are countries taking,
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2122
26:32
how they can learn from each other,
431
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2060
26:34
so we can be more effective together.
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2594
26:37
We are adding to it, now,
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2241
26:39
actions for responsible reopening of the economies
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4206
26:43
exactly with that purpose.
435
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2135
26:46
What we are known best for,
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1680
26:47
we are the financial first responder.
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1607879
3719
26:52
We are coming in this incredible shock
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4500
26:57
with very significant financial firepower.
439
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4361
27:02
And what people don't know is that the Fund has multiple instruments.
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6535
27:08
Emergency financing is the one we doubled for this crisis.
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1628668
4738
27:13
And it is no conditionalities.
442
1633739
2223
27:15
We are asking one thing, Chris.
443
1635986
2533
27:19
Pay your doctors and your nurses, your hospitals,
444
1639180
3666
27:22
protect your most vulnerable people and parts of the economy.
445
1642870
3286
27:26
That's it, this is the condition.
446
1646180
1975
27:28
And the third thing we do at the Fund
447
1648710
2762
27:31
is to help countries have the capacity for good policies.
448
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5065
27:36
After the financial crisis,
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2976
27:39
we helped many countries to have good debt management,
450
1659585
3660
27:43
good fiscal management,
451
1663269
1745
27:45
transparency and accountability
452
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1762
27:46
to improve the performance of public finance.
453
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4025
27:51
So the Fund is not a very big organization
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5032
27:56
by any standard,
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1151
27:57
we are some 3,000 people.
456
1677444
2007
27:59
Highly professional, incredibly committed.
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1679816
3329
28:03
When you use the expression "all hands on deck," that's us.
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5301
28:09
And it is a digital deck,
459
1689696
1445
28:11
it is a digital deck these days.
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2133
28:14
CA: I mean, this is a global crisis.
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2183
28:16
A lot of people are worried that unlike perhaps even in 2008,
462
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3558
28:20
where it really did seem there was a lot of global cooperation,
463
1700477
3063
28:23
there's actually, in some worrying ways,
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1958
28:25
less this time?
465
1705546
2308
28:29
Are you worried about
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1709000
1228
28:30
how crucial is that to getting us through this?
467
1710252
2864
28:33
KG: I mean, my preoccupation is,
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1713966
3706
28:37
in our mandate, in my area of responsibility,
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1717696
3167
28:40
bring the membership together.
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1720887
1483
28:42
We have almost the whole world,
471
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2357
28:44
189 countries are our members,
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1724775
2976
28:47
and so far, I am very impressed by how responsive the membership has been.
473
1727775
6881
28:54
I put in front of them in the spring
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3116
28:57
a package, very strong package of measures
475
1737820
3043
29:00
to expand the role of the IMF in the crisis.
476
1740887
3857
29:04
Everything that we ask for --
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2158
29:06
we ask for doubling emergency financing,
478
1746950
2887
29:09
we got it.
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1161
29:11
Very interesting.
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1167
29:12
We ask for tripling concession of financing.
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3084
29:15
Exactly because, you know,
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2326
29:17
like the virus hits people with a weak system the hardest,
483
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4388
29:22
the crisis hits weak economies the hardest.
484
1762107
3722
29:25
So we wanted to triple concession of financing.
485
1765853
3413
29:29
Within one month, we got it.
486
1769290
3779
29:33
We asked for grants for debt relief,
487
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2937
29:36
we got it.
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1168
29:37
So what I'm trying to say here is that we need to focus
489
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5425
29:43
on ways in which we bring the world together.
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4037
29:47
And then act on that.
491
1787621
3526
29:51
Rather than complaining
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3390
29:54
that maybe not everything is the way it should be,
493
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4524
29:59
do your duty to the global community.
494
1799133
3166
30:03
CA: Well, indeed.
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1151
30:04
And the IMF is dependent on the financing from its members,
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4539
30:09
its key members.
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1151
30:10
KG: Yes.
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1285
30:11
CA: I mean, you spoke of the trillion dollars
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2315
30:13
that you are looking to make available to nations that need it.
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4097
30:18
As I read it, that comes from --
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1730
30:19
you've got these units called Special Drawing Rights.
502
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4127
30:23
You basically draw a currency from members.
503
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2472
30:26
And hasn't there been pushback, though, from the US,
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1826470
3088
30:29
to block that effort of raising all that money?
505
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4848
30:35
KG: So the one trillion dollars is from our quotas
506
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5833
30:41
and also from our ability to move money
507
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5106
30:46
from well-to-do members from the advanced economies
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5710
30:52
and lend it at very low or zero interest
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4079
30:56
to the developing emerging markets.
510
1856162
2833
30:59
And we had this one trillion
511
1859019
1580
31:00
and what was very interesting, not everybody noticed that --
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3644
31:04
the US, in their two trillion dollars stimulus package,
513
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5016
31:09
included the support for the IMF.
514
1869331
2846
31:12
The Special Drawing Rights
515
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2031
31:14
is something that we, indeed,
516
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2264
31:17
don't have yet consensus among the membership to do.
517
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4370
31:22
It was done during the 2009 crisis,
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5491
31:27
issuing liquidity,
519
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3430
31:31
and it goes to everybody.
520
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1977
31:33
And there are many voices, including mine --
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2547
31:36
I spoke to the G20 about that --
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2538
31:38
that are saying, well, that may be a good thing to do now.
523
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3025
31:42
It is not being supported for reasons.
524
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4361
31:47
It is not just capriciously.
525
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2276
31:49
The problem with Special Drawing Rights is that when we issue them,
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4786
31:54
they go to all members,
527
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1762
31:56
and the advanced economies get 62 percent of the new allocation,
528
1916554
5532
32:02
and there are some that are saying,
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1922110
2285
32:04
"Can we think of something that is more directed,
530
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3280
32:07
or exclusively directed to those who need it?"
531
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3385
32:11
But, Chris, everything is on the table for us.
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2731
32:14
As the crisis unfolds,
533
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4420
32:18
we need to do more, we bring the membership to do more.
534
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4362
32:25
CA: Whitney.
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1150
32:26
WPR: We actually have a question from the community
536
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2389
32:29
that builds on what you're discussing right now.
537
1949328
2511
32:31
Yavnika Khanna asks,
538
1951863
2008
32:33
"Which countries will prove to be resilient in the Great Transformation:
539
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3420
32:37
those with popular leaders or those with sound financial systems?"
540
1957339
3494
32:41
KG: You know, they both matter.
541
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2381
32:44
Countries with strong fundamentals
542
1964762
2943
32:47
are clearly going through this crisis
543
1967729
4610
32:52
with less trauma than those that had weak fundamentals to begin with.
544
1972363
6647
32:59
And of course, leadership matters.
545
1979458
2814
33:02
How you mobilize a country for action matters.
546
1982296
4126
33:07
In my view, what we would see on the other side,
547
1987470
4016
33:11
the winners would be those who think today of this crisis
548
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5977
33:17
also as an opportunity.
549
1997511
2250
33:20
Clearly, digital transformation is a huge opportunity.
550
2000833
4516
33:25
Moving to e-learning, e-government,
551
2005969
4785
33:30
e-payments, e-commerce,
552
2010778
3299
33:34
linking small and medium-sized enterprises
553
2014101
4286
33:38
through digital to consumers,
554
2018411
2039
33:40
big winner.
555
2020474
1150
33:42
Secondly, I very much hope
556
2022625
3785
33:46
that we would come on the other side
557
2026434
3905
33:50
with a low carbon footprint
558
2030363
2767
33:53
and a more climate-resilient economy.
559
2033154
3125
33:56
Those who move in this direction,
560
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2508
33:59
they would reduce the risk for themselves and the world.
561
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4802
34:04
From this other crisis,
562
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1439
34:06
that we are not talking so much about these days,
563
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2298
34:08
but it hasn't gone anywhere.
564
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2000
34:10
And you know, if you don't like pandemic,
565
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2294
34:13
you are not going to like the climate crisis at all.
566
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4520
34:18
And also, countries that are thinking
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2058407
2484
34:20
of how to make the economy in the future
568
2060915
6789
34:27
a fairer economy.
569
2067728
1603
34:29
In other words,
570
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1738
34:31
we have been seeing inequality building up before this crisis.
571
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5570
34:37
My colleagues who have researched pandemics
572
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4079
34:41
have a very bitter lesson for us.
573
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2738
34:44
After pandemics,
574
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1222
34:45
after H1N1,
575
2085823
4722
34:50
after SARS, after Zika,
576
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3516
34:54
inequality goes up.
577
2094109
1267
34:56
Well, are we going to let inequality to go up, up,
578
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4118
35:00
after this crisis?
579
2100902
1151
35:02
And if we do,
580
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1587
35:03
we are damaging the fabric of our societies,
581
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3246
35:06
and my sense is that hundreds of millions of people in this crisis
582
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6078
35:13
would much prefer to have a simpler, fairer,
583
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6204
35:19
more equitable world to live in,
584
2119288
2934
35:22
and definitely, a more sustainable world.
585
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2978
35:26
CA: Mm.
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1395
35:28
KG: Those would be the winners.
587
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1733
35:32
WPR: Definitely.
588
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1170
35:33
And just one more question from our community,
589
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2143
35:35
before turning it back to Chris for some final questions here.
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You know, this one is from Sarah Rugheimer.
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And the question is,
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"What do you see as the main potential positive shifts / changes
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in this world
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from this pandemic, say, two to 10 years from now?"
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KG: Well, I touched upon it a little bit.
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First, I hope to see fiscal policy
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to help us recover
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to be geared towards green recovery
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and more equitable recovery.
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And that is something that is in the hands of policymakers.
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It can be done.
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Secondly, I very much hope to see us
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integrating what we have learned from the crisis,
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in terms of virtual work.
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My organization, the IMF,
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well, we can shrink our carbon footprint dramatically
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just by sustaining the practices we are developing now,
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and we will.
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I certainly hope to see, in the future,
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much more attention to two things that we saw in this crisis are essential.
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Universal access to health in some form,
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strong health systems,
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as well as strong social safety nets,
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built as automatic stabilizers in a time of shock.
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And by the way, it is cheaper if we do it in this way.
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The bill for everyone is going to be smaller.
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And also, I very much hope that this notion of investing in people,
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recognizing that now that we see this horrible tragedy,
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the loss of lives,
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that investing in people is the very best investment we can make.
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CA: Mm.
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WPR: That's great.
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CA: So, see you again in a minute, Whitney.
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Kristalina, it's so --
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It's so inspiring, actually, hearing the energy and stuff,
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the energy that you're bringing to this.
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I don't think many people coming into this
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would have expected to hear, from the head of the IMF,
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this emphasis on, you know,
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"Let's solve the climate crisis,
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let's tackle inequality and injustice."
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Do you really believe that this moment,
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this crisis could help lead us into a great transformation?
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People will feel it's your job to sound positive,
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you have to do that.
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Do you really see the path forward that we can get through this,
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and what sort of timescale are we talking about here, Kristalina?
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KG: Well, you know, one thing I learned from the transition I lived through,
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the transition from central planning to markets,
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is it is tough, it is long, it is painful
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and it is a road that takes turns.
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So I don't have an expectation of miracle from here to there.
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But I genuinely believe that we are now
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in a point of our history
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when people demand from their leaders
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safety and security
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and a society that is not torn apart by conflicts.
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And that is actually not unusual to see.
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So, I would turn the table a little bit on you, Chris.
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After a war,
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we see the world coming together
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and building a better world.
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Why not after a pandemic?
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And yes,
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we can make mistakes and not take the right road to travel.
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But we certainly have an obligation to try to get on that road.
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CA: So if you could just inject --
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KG: And everybody matters for that.
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CA: So if you could inject one idea into the mind of everybody,
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or into to the world leaders who listen to you,
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what would that idea be at this moment?
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KG: Optimism.
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Build a better world.
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Possible, desirable, we must do it.
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CA: That sounds like optimism as the stance,
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not just a naive belief that it will happen,
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but a determination to make it so.
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That's what you're calling for.
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To use that as the motivation to pull us all forward together.
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KG: Chris, do I have one minute, or I'm done, I need to go?
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CA: If you want to say one last thing in one minute, alright, go.
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KG: I want to say one thing.
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To recommend to the audience to watch the movie
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"Bridge of Spies."
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There is a part in the movie
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in which the two main actors,
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the lawyer and the Russian spy, talk to each other.
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The lawyer says, "Things are very bad, it looks like you may hang."
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The spy is very calm.
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Lawyer says, "Aren't you worried?"
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The spy answers, "Would it help?"
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So my message is, it is tough,
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but worries won't help.
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Positive action will.
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Positive, stay positive, so that's my message.
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CA: Well, I have to say thank you.
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It's incredibly inspiring, actually, to see your energy
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and your determined optimism, let's call it that.
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I think we wish you the very best
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as you use your position to help get us out of this mess.
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Thank you so much, Kristalina, for spending time here at TED.
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Thank you.
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WPR: Thank you, Kristalina.
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