LUSAKA, Zambia
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has approved a $1.3 billion loan to Zambia to help the debt-ridden country restore fiscal stability.
In 2020, battering the
Covid-19 pandemic and choking under the weight of loans, Zambia became the
first country in Africa to default on foreign debt.
According to official
government data, the southern African country’s debt totalled $31.74 billion at
the end of 2021, of which $17.27 billion was external debt, mostly from two
Eurobonds and China.
Africa’s second-largest copper
producer has struggled to jumpstart its economy as it grapples with a debt load
reaching 120 percent of the GDP.
The country had reached a
tentative agreement with IMF in December for a $1.3 billion facility,
contingent on Zambia taking steps to reduce its debt to levels IMF deemed
sustainable.
In late July, its creditors
led by China and France, pledged to negotiate a restructuring of Zambia’s
debts, a move IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said was “clearing the
way” for funding.
Since coming into power a year
ago, the new government of Hakainde Hichilema has made progress in restoring
relations with donors as it tackles years of economic mismanagement.
The IMF says the $1.3 billion
credit line will help Lusaka’s homegrown reform plan to “restore debt
sustainability, create fiscal space for much-needed social spending, and
strengthen economic governance”.
The IMF statement said
Zambia’s economic growth “has been too low to reduce rates of poverty,
inequality, and malnutrition that are amongst the highest in the world.
“Zambia is in debt distress
and needs a deep and comprehensive debt treatment to place public debt on a sustainable
path”.
President Hichilema welcomed
the IMF decision Thursday and pledged that his government would avoid borrowing
recklessly while implementing reforms to fix the economy.
The approval by the IMF’s
Executive Board will unlock an immediate disbursement of about $185 million. -
AFP
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