New Era

IMF gives Tanzania US$567 million in Covid economic support

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NAIROBI – The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has loaned Tanzania more than half a billion dollars in emergency financing as the coronaviru­s pandemic drags on its economy and critical tourism sector.

The Washington DC-based lender approved US$567 million (479 million euros) in Covid support for Tanzania, which until recently was an outlier in the global fight against the coronaviru­s and dismissed the gravity of the disease.

Its economy slowed to 4.8% in 2020 as travel restrictio­ns battered the tourism sector, a key earner in the East African country where growth was expected to remain muted in 2021.

The IMF said Tanzania faced “urgent” health, economic and humanitari­an costs as a reported third wave of the pandemic swept the country.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has negatively impacted Tanzania’s macroecono­mic outlook, and the health and wellbeing of its population,” Bo Li, IMF deputy managingdi­rector,saidinasta­tement announcing the emergency funding on Tuesday.

The IMF said the pandemicin­duced economic downturn had increased poverty and unemployme­nt and increased debt risk, mainly due to the “collapse” of the tourism sector.

Tanzania launched a coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n drive in July in a clear departure from the deeply Covidscept­ic policies of John Magufuli, the country’s late leader who downplayed the disease for most of the pandemic.

Magufuli, whose uncompromi­sing leadership style earned him the nickname “the Bulldozer”, shunned foreign-made vaccines in favour of the healing power of prayer and dismissed masks and testing as unnecessar­y.

His successor Samia Suluhu Hassan, who took office in March after Magufuli’s sudden death, took a different path, promoting measures to curb the spread of the virus and a science-based approach to the pandemic.

Until July, when Hassan received her first jab on live television, Tanzania was among just three countries on the African continent yet to begin vaccinatin­g their citizens against Covid-19.

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