Daily Nation Newspaper

IMF nods $309m in Covid-19 financing to MOZ

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JOHANNESBU­RG - The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Friday it has approved a disburseme­nt of $309 million to help Mozambique meet urgent balance of payment and fiscal needs stemming from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

African nations including Mozambique have become heavily indebted in the past decade and are seeking support from the IMF, World Bank and European Union for wide-ranging debt relief.

Last Thursday Mozambique lowered its forecast for economic growth this year to 2.2 percent from a previous forecast of four percent because of the impact of the virus, which has infected 65 people.

Its budget showed the country, which was struck by two devastatin­g cyclones last year, expects to record a deficit of more than 10 percent of gross domestic product in 2020.

“Mozambique is expected to be significan­tly affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, dashing prospects of a nascent economic recovery following two powerful tropical cyclones that struck in 2019,” IMF Deputy Managing Director and Chair Tao Zhang said in a statement. “Given Mozambique’s limited fiscal space and high public debt, additional external support, preferably in the form of grants and highly concession­al loans, is also urgently required to meet the country’s elevated financing needs and ease the financial burden of the pandemic.”

The IMF’s emergency financial support is under the Rapid Credit Facility.

The Fund said significan­t disruption­s are emerging in services, transport, agricultur­e, manufactur­ing and communicat­ions coupled with a much worse external environmen­t affecting export-oriented sectors, such as mining.

To mitigate the impact of the pandemic and preserve macro-economic stability, the government has taken several steps to increase health spending, strengthen social protection to the most vulnerable and support micro-businesses and small and medium-sized enterprise­s, it added. – REUTERS.

impact.

Jay Benson, a senior researcher with the One Earth Future Foundation in Denver, Colorado, said potential issuers with large diasporan population­s included Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Ratha said diasporan investors were typically less skittish than outside investors.

“They have a connection to a country and have a vested interest, as they might return,” he said, noting that migrants also often had greater access to land and assets. – REUTERS.

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