IMF, World Bank Say They Are Resuming Dealings With Venezuela

WASHINGTON, April 16 (Reuters) – The International Monetary ⁠Fund ⁠and the World Bank said ⁠on Thursday they had resumed dealings with Venezuela, which had been paused ​since 2019.

The move paves the way for a full IMF assessment of Venezuela’s economy for the ‌first time in some 20 years ‌and could eventually unlock billions of dollars in funding via frozen special drawing rights.

IMF Managing ⁠Director Kristalina ⁠Georgieva said in a statement that the Fund, guided by the ​views of a majority of its members, was now dealing with Venezuela’s government under the administration of the South American nation’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez.

The World Bank Group also issued a statement announcing it ​was resuming dealings with Venezuela’s government under Rodriguez. Its last loan, the statement said, was ⁠in ⁠2005.

The resumption of a formal ⁠relationship comes ​after U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration in January ousted President Nicolas Maduro in a raid ​on Caracas. Since then, Washington ⁠has been working with Rodriguez and is looking to expand the U.S. presence in Venezuela’s oil and mining sectors.

“This is a very important step for the Venezuelan economy,” Rodriguez said in a televised address, thanking Trump and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as well as others, ⁠for their help in normalizing the relationship with the IMF.

DEBT RESTRUCTURING AND SHORT-TERM ⁠FUNDING HOPES

JPMorgan has estimated that Venezuela’s special drawing rights, assets that are available to countries with engagement with the IMF, are worth $5 billion.

Investors have bet big on Venezuela’s bonds in hopes that the change in government can enable a debt restructuring. Analysts estimate that Venezuela has about $60 billion of defaulted bonds outstanding, but total external debt is pegged at roughly $150 billion to $170 billion.

The IMF last month said it was beginning to re-engage with Venezuela, starting by collecting basic data and assessing the economy ⁠after years of gaps. But a full sovereign restructuring is typically underpinned by a new IMF lending program – and the data that comes with it regarding what level of debt is sustainable for a country.

(Reporting by Libby George in Washington. Additional reporting ​by Mrinmay Dey and Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City; Editing by ​Iñigo Alexander, Nick Zieminski and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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