Khaleej Times

Tunisia urged to step up reforms

- Tarek Amara

tunis — Tunisia is likely to sell stakes in three state-owned banks this year and cut up to 10,000 public sector jobs as part of reforms demanded by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), which has postponed the payment of the second tranche of a loan, the finance minister said.

Six years after its 2011 prodemocra­cy uprising, Tunisia is struggling to make economic progress. Last June, the IMF released the first tranche of a loan worth $320 million.

Finance Minister Lamia Zribi told Reuters a second payment had not been made. “The IMF postponed the payment of a second tranche worth $350 million scheduled last December because of lack of progress in reforms, including public sector wage bill, the public finances and state banks,” the minister said.

Zribi said an IMF delegation had been expected in Tunisia next month to discuss reforms and the third tranche of the loan, but the team will not come if they did not see reform progress.

Any official suspension of IMF installmen­ts of the loan could push other internatio­nal partners to retreat from lending to the North African state.

Zribi said the government was ready to launch a new push on the reforms package in the public sector, the banking sector, state companies and taxes.

The minister said the government would immediatel­y begin plans for a voluntary layoff programme for state employees by encouragin­g early retirement, aiming to cut at least 10,000 public sector jobs in 2017 through the programme.

Since 2011, Tunisia has been backed by foreign partners and multilater­al lenders keen to see the new democracy succeed. But economic reforms have lagged behind political changes. — Reuters

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