Site icon ActionAid USA

The SDRs Playbook: An opportunity to make IMF Special Drawing Rights allocations work better for developing countries

IMF Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) have provided critical relief for countries in times of financial crisis. Yet the IMF’s own analysis shows that lower-income countries are being short-changed by the current method of SDR allocations, which are distributed proportionally according to IMF quota shares, a system that systematically under-represents the world’s most vulnerable nations. As countries face compounding crises, the central question is: how to design SDR allocations so they better align with the reserve needs of all IMF members, not just the wealthiest.

In July 2025, the Fourth UN Financing for Development (FfD4) conference in Seville, Spain, reached a landmark heads-of-state agreement recognizing the need to reform the International Monetary Fund Special Drawing Rights. The conference’s outcome document, the Compromiso de Sevilla, invites the International Monetary Fund to develop an “SDRs Playbook”, operational guidance to strengthen the role of SDRs during crises and shocks. This paper examines the weaknesses of the IMF’s current approach, traces their implications during the landmark 2021 allocation, and assesses proposals for making SDR allocations more effective for developing countries.

Key findings

Ambitious reforms to the SDRs system could help address overlapping climate, debt, and inequality crises in a manner aligned with climate and economic justice principles, while delivering dividends to all countries through enhanced macroeconomic stability.

Exit mobile version