Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Zim creditors to meet over arrears clearance

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ZIMBABWE’S creditors will meet on February 23, 2023 as the country takes steps towards clearing more than $6 billion of arrears on its foreign debt, finance minister Mthuli Ncube said on Wednesday.

About 17 countries from the Paris Club of creditor nations will attend, as well as the World Bank, African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) and European Investment Bank, to discuss progress on economic and governance reforms, including compensati­on to white former farmers, Ncube said.

Zimbabwe, which has suffered periods of hyperinfla­tion in the past 15 years, had over US$14 billion in external debt as of September, according to finance ministry data. Due to its arrears, it has not received loans from lenders such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank for more than two decades.

The meeting agenda “is part of what is needed for us to walk through the road towards arrears clearance,” Ncube said.

“It has really begun in earnest, so I am pleased we are at this stage and we are making very good progress.”

The creditors first met on December 1, facilitate­d by AfDB president Akinwumi Adesina and former Mozambique president Joaquim Chissano.

Ncube said in October the government had begun making “token payments” to the multilater­al lenders and planned to do so to its Paris Club creditors as well.

The IMF said after a visit to Zimbabwe in December that the country would need durable reforms and a clear path to restructur­ing its debt, including clearing the US$6 billion of arrears, before it could receive Fund money.

Annual inflation fell to 229,8 percent in January from 243,8 percent in December, prompting the central bank to cut interest rates by 50 percentage points to 150 percent. — Reuters

 ?? ?? Minister Ncube
Minister Ncube

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