MARSEILLE,
France, Sept 10 (Reuters) - Group of Eight finance chiefs pledged $38 billion
on Saturday in financing to Tunisia, Egypt, Morocco and Jordan over 2011-13,
widening a deal agreed in May and offering Libya the chance to partake too.
The IMF
promised a further $35 billion in funding to countries affected by Arab Spring
uprisings and formally recognised Libya's ruling interim council as a
legitimate power, opening up access to a myriad of international lenders as the
country looks to rebuild after a six-month war.
G8 chair
France said the figure agreed at talks in the Mediterranean port of Marseille
was roughly double a sum agreed in May, when the eight economic powers met in
the northern French seaside town of Deauville. In Marseille, the original Arab
Spring partnership was extended to Jordan and Morocco.
Finance
Minister Francois Baroin said that Libya, whose National Transitional Council
was represented at the talks, had also been invited to join the so-called
Deauville Partnership.
"The
institutions pledged to increase their financial network to $38 billion
compared with the $20 billion pledged at Deauville," Baroin told a news
conference. "These are not just words, an important step was taken this
morning."
Getting IMF
recognition is significant for Libya's interim leaders as it means
international development banks and donors such as the World Bank can now offer
financing.
"Libya
attended this meeting as an observer and I'm very pleased to report that the
IMF now recognises the interim governing council as the official government of
Libya," IMF chief Christine Lagarde told a separate news conference.
"In
this context the fund will stand ready to help the authorities through all the
services the fund provides. I will be sending a team in the field in Libya as
soon as security is appropriate for my people to be on the ground," she
said, adding there would be a focus on aiding oil-exporting countries.
WARY OF AID-DEPENDENCE
The
Marseille talks came a few days after world leaders agreed in Paris to free up
billions of dollars in frozen assets to help Libya's interim rulers restore
vital services and rebuild after a conflict that ended a 42-year dictatorship.
The
financing deal by the Group of Seven major economies plus Russia is aimed at
supporting reform efforts in the wake of uprisings in North Africa and the
Middle East.
The
financing is mostly in the form of loans, rather than outright grants, and is
provided half by G8 and Arab countries and half by various lenders and
development banks.
It includes
$10.7 billion put up by the World Bank, $7.6 billion from the African
Development Bank, $5.0 billion from the Islamic Development Bank and more from
the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and other lenders.
International
financial institutions at the G8 talks warned of the challenges faced by Arab
Spring countries trying to tap external finance while faced with high risk
perceptions and social and financial strains at home.
Officials
called for enhanced access to developed country markets for North African and
Middle Eastern products and labour to avoid aid dependency and help build up
the private sector.
The
Deauville initiative was set up under France's G8 presidency to help countries
swept up in the Arab Spring foster democratic reforms by making aid and
development credits conditional on political and economic reforms.
G8
officials discussed the economic challenges faced by countries like Tunisia,
Egypt and Libya and agreed to ramp up trade and open markets between the region
and the developed world.
The EBRD is
taking a lead role as it extends its lending mandate to encompass countries
affected by the Arab Spring.
Delegations
taking part in Saturday's G8 meeting included representatives of Libya's ruling
interim council, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar and
Turkey.
Regional
bodies present included the Arab monetary fund, the Arab fund for economic and
social development and the OPEC's fund for international development, OFID.
(Editing
by Mike Peacock)
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