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Displaying 161 - 180 of 1028Yemen's economic program is supported by an IMF Extended Arrangement and a three year arrangement under the IMF's Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility approved in October 1997.
Paris Club creditors agreed on November 16, 2001 with the Government of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to a restructuring of its public external debt, following the approval of a Stand-By agree
The representatives of the Paris Club creditor countries met on May 11, 2005 and agreed to recommend to their Governments a reduction of Zambia's stock of debt.
The Paris Club celebrated, on 14 June 2006, its fiftieth anniversary by holding an international policy forum
On Wednesday, the 16th of June the Paris Club jointly organized with the Institute of International Finance a high-level international conference dealing with the sustainable financing of emerging
On Thursday 25 June 2009, the Paris Club and the Institute of International Finance (IIF), held under the presidency of Ms Christine Lagarde, French Minister of Economy, Industry and Employment, a
The Paris Club is an informal group of official creditors whose role is to find coordinated and sustainable solutions to the payment difficulties experienced by debtor countries.
The Paris Club activity is organized around monthly sessions.
These sessions are prepared by a Secretariat General.
After a few words from the chairman to welcome everybody and to open the meeting, the official meeting begins with a statement by the minister of the borrower country, who presents in particular th
Paris Club creditor countries generally meet each month (in principle, except in February and August) in Paris.
Since 1956, the Paris Club has remained a central player in the resolution of developing and emerging countries' debt problems.
The Paris Club is a group of currently 22 permanent members.
The Paris Club has remained strictly informal.
The outcome of the negotiation is not a legally-binding agreement between the debtor and each of its creditors but instead a document called Agreed Minutes.
The Paris Club Agreed Minutes include a “comparability of treatment” clause, which aims to ensure balanced treatment of the debtor country's debt by all external creditors.