But policymakers and politicians in some poor countries have said the mechanism has failed to provide much relief due to a lack of progress in bringing key creditors around the table and getting them to commit to joint action.
Sitharaman told Georgieva India would support efforts for the orderly and timely implementation of the Common Framework, her ministry said. The world's poorest countries faced about $35 billion in debt-service payments to official and private-sector creditors in 2022, more than 40% of that is due to China, according to World Bank estimates. Sitharaman and Georgieva agreed that the voices of "vulnerable and under-represented" need to be heard through the leadership of the G20, the finance ministry said on Twitter. IMF chief has earlier said that China's finance minister and its central bank governor would attend a roundtable with other creditors and some borrowing countries later this month in India.
Sitharaman also sought IMF support in providing technical analysis for ensuring food and energy security for all. (Reporting by Manoj Kumar and Tanvi Mehta; Editing by Krishna N. Das, Robert Birsel)