The Borneo Post

IMF delays Mongolia bailout due to banking requiremen­ts for foreign firms

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ULAANBAATA­R: The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has postponed a US$5.5 billion bailout for Mongolia because of a measure included in the 2017 budget that forces foreign firms to bank with domestic institutio­ns, the IMF’s country representa­tive said.

Mongolia’s economy has slid into a crisis caused by heavy foreign debt, a collapse in its currency and a slowdown in growth in its biggest trading partner, China.

The IMF board had been expected to approve a rescue package at a meeting on April 28.

“The Board discussion was postponed,” said Neil Saker, the IMF’s Mongolia country representa­tive, in emailed comments, adding that they needed to examine the details of a new measure covering foreign exchange transactio­ns by investors.

The IMF announced in February a US$440 million Extended Fund Facility that Mongolia can draw on for three years, in addition to US$3 billion from Japan and South Korea and a three-year extension to a 15 billion yuan (US$2.18 billion) swap agreement with the People’s Bank of China.

In the 2017 budget approved in the early hours of the morning on April 14, legislator­s introduced tax changes that would allow it to meet conditions set by the IMF.

But it also included a clause seeking to ‘improve’ investment agreements with foreign partners, forcing firms such as miner Oyu Tolgoi LLC, jointly owned by Mongolia and Rio Tinto , to do all their banking with Mongolian institutio­ns.

“We need a bit more time to understand the nature and the specifics of the measure, and whether the macroecono­mic framework of the program remains valid,” said Saker.

Mongolia’s Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediatel­y respond for comment. — Reuters

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