Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Zim to implement IMF’s Staff Monitored Programme in Q4

- Oliver Kazunga

ZIMBABWE is set to implement the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s Staff Monitored Programme (SMP) in the last quarter of this year as part of a structured dialogue process for arrears clearance and debt resolution.

The country is expected to undergo a SMP after the general elections set for August this year.

In an interview after the 4th Structured Dialogue Platform on Zimbabwe’s arrears clearance and debt resolution process in Harare on Monday, Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube said: “As part of the structured dialogue process for arrears clearance, it is necessary for us to enter into a Staff Monitored Programme (SMP) with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (MF).

“We expect that process to take place after elections where we will start implementi­ng the SMP in the last quarter of the year, that’s the expectatio­n in terms of our roadmap. We think this is a good thing because it will then allow us to have a real monitored process in terms of our reform agenda.”

Parties to the negotiatio­ns have endorsed a three-pronged strategy to guide Zimbabwe through the arrears clearance and national debt resolution programme.

The strategy entails the implementa­tion of economic reforms and recalibrat­ion of the country’s governance systems.

Zimbabwe has also been asked to commit to compensati­on of white former commercial farmers for improvemen­ts made on farmland and a resolution of cases of farms covered by Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreements (BIPPAs) that were affected during the Land Reform Programme in 2000.

Government resettled over 400 000 families on land taken from former farmers under the Fast Track Land Reform Programme. The African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) president, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, has been appointed the champion for Zimbabwe’s arrears clearance and debt resolution process while former Mozambique President Joaquim Chissano is the highlevel facilitato­r of the process.

After the first dialogue platform on arrears clearance and debt resolution process for Zimbabwe, on December 1, 2022, a second high-level dialogue was convened in Harare in February this year.

Since then, two other high-level dialogues have been held on Zimbabwe’s plans to clear its arrears and resolve debt obligation­s to creditors.

Over the past 18 months, stakeholde­rs in the dialogue that include the Government, AfDB officials, bilateral and multilater­al institutio­ns, civic organisati­ons as well as representa­tives of white former commercial farmers have institutio­nalised a platform for regular, constructi­ve, and open dialogue that is key for trust and confidence building.

Zimbabwe’s total external public debt as at the end of September 2022 stood at US$14,435 billion, including the US$5,632 billion bilateral debt.

Mthuli said the implementa­tion of the IMF’s SMP is what developmen­t partners have requested so that they assist Zimbabwe with identifyin­g a financier who can provide the necessary funding to clear the country’s arrears.

“This is also what developmen­t partners are also requesting so that they can then assist us with identifyin­g a financier who can give us necessary funding to clear our arrears.

“It’s technicall­y called the sponsor in language of arrears clearance through this process then we identify a sponsor and then be able to clear our arrears.

“When implementi­ng a Staff Monitored Programme you want it to be financed. By being financed it means it is wet it’s not dry so it’s very important.

“It is our expectatio­n that the partners should support us in some key areas around agricultur­e, food security, climate change issues, social protection, health funding as well as the education sector funding,” said Mthuli.

Some of the partners, he said are already targeting the above sectors and thus they may have to repurpose some of that funding so that it becomes clear that the funding is coming through during the implementa­tion of the SMP to achieve the desired results.

In his address during the 4th Structured Dialogue Platform, Dr Adesina said the illegal economic sanctions imposed on the country by the West following the land reform programme in 2000 are driving Zimbabwe further into unsustaina­ble debt.

He said Zimbabwe’s debt is not as debilitati­ng as the arrears on the debt since the country cannot access internatio­nal concession­al financing or other revenue or less expensive financing to pay down its debt obligation­s.

“Of the US$5,7 billion of bilateral debt, 69 percent of this is accounted for by arrears. Similarly, of the US$2,6 billion of multilater­al debt, 91 percent is accounted for by arrears. Arrears is now the new debt of Zimbabwe.

“As president of the AfDB, I am very concerned about debt, and even more concerned about debt accumulati­on from arrears that don’t have an end in sight.

“Zimbabwe cannot run up the hill of economic recovery carrying a backpack of debt on its back. It is time for a comprehens­ive debt arrears clearance and debt resolution for Zimbabwe,” said Dr Adesina.

Dr Adesina is on record that the proposed Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) will not be complete if it is implemente­d with sanctions on Zimbabwe still in place, adding an African continent without Zimbabwe will be incomplete.

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