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Maendeleo Vijijini
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IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde (file photo)
Maputo — The
International Monetary Fund (IMF) has demanded an international,
independent forensic audit of the government guaranteed loans contracted
by the Mozambican companies EMATUM (Mozambique Tuna Company), MAM
(Mozambique Asset Management) and Proindicus (intended to provide
maritime security services).
The three companies
are all security linked. GIPS, the investment arm of the State Security
and Intelligence Service (SISE), owns 33 per cent of EMATUM, 50 per
cent of Proindicus and 98 per cent of MAM.
The three loans
amount to slightly more than two billion US dollars. They were
contracted in 2013-14, under the previous Mozambican government headed
by President Armando Guebuza.
At the time, only the EMATUM loan (for 850
million dollars, arranged on the European bond market) was public
knowledge. The loans to Proindicus (622 million dollars) and to MAM (535
million dollars) were not disclosed, either to the Mozambican public,
or to the country's international partners, including the IMF.
When the two loans
became public knowledge in April, the IMF suspended the second
instalment of a loan of 282 million dollars from its Standby Credit
Facility (SCF). Other donors also suspended financial aid, including the
group of 14 countries and agencies that used to provide direct support
to the Mozambican state budget.
An IMF mission
visited Mozambique from 16 to 24 June, essentially to discuss the
undisclosed loans, and met with senior government officials, including
President Filipe Nyusi, Prime Minister Carlos Agostinho do Rosario,
Finance Minister Adriano Maleiane, and the Governor of the Bank of
Mozambique, Ernesto Gove.
After the visit,
the head of the mission, Michel Lazare, declared that “recent
initiatives to investigate the previously undisclosed debt, through the
Attorney General and a Parliamentary Inquiry Commission, are important
steps to restore confidence”.
But the IMF does
not regard these steps as sufficient, and Lazare called for “an
international and independent audit” of the three controversial loans.
Lazare warned that
the two undisclosed loans had pushed Mozambique's total debt stock, at
the end of 2016, to 86 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (the ceiling
for this ratio is usually regarded as 40 per cent).
“According to our
technical assessment, public debt is now likely to have reached a high
risk of distress”, said Lazare. Furthermore, even before the suspension
of IMF lending, “performance under the 2015-2017 Stand-by Credit
Facility has been disappointing, with most assessment and performance
criteria or indicative targets being missed at end-December 2015 and
end-March 2016”.
The IMF has revised
its forecast for Mozambican economic growth this year sharply downward.
It expects growth to be no more than 4.5 per cent, compared with 6.6
per cent in 2015. “Fiscal policy in 2015 and the first half of this year
has been excessively expansionary, with an increase in net credit to
the government that far exceeded program targets”, said Lazare.
Meanwhile, inflation in the first five months of the year had reached 16
per cent, and the Mozambican currency, the metical, had depreciated by
28 per cent against the dollar.
Lazare said the IMF
mission and the government “agreed that this context calls for an
urgent and decisive package of policy measures to avoid a further
deterioration in economic performance. In particular, substantial fiscal
and monetary tightening, as well as exchange rate flexibility, are
needed to restore macroeconomic sustainability, reduce pressures on
inflation and the balance of payments, and help alleviate pressures on
the foreign exchange market while restoring balance between supply and
demand on the foreign exchange market”.
Thus further
austerity is likely to be imposed, and further devaluation of the
metical, thus eroding real wages and savings. This “adjustment”, Lazare
added, “should preserve critical social programmes” - this presumably
means that the education and health services will be shielded from
impending cuts.
“Further progress
in the effective implementation of both the corrective macroeconomic
measures and the measures aimed at strengthening transparency, improving
governance, and ensuring accountability would pave the way for the
resumption of programme discussions at a later stage”, Lazare concluded.
Thus the SCF programme remains suspended for the time being.
The Mozambican
Finance Ministry issued a statement, saying the government had briefed
the IMF mission on recent economic developments “stressing the impacts
of drought and floods in some parts of the country, as well as the
decline in the prices of export products which has impacted negatively
on export revenue”.
It was this
situation, the government said, which was provoking a shortage of
foreign exchange and the volatility in the metical exchange rate.
The statement said
the IMF mission “took note, in particular, of the measures of budgetary
restraint that the government will adopt, without damaging the
commitment to continue guaranteeing resources to the social sectors”,
The government, the
statement concluded, “reiterated its commitment to deepen economic and
social reforms, as well as building up the technical capacity of
institutions for better performance of the public and private sectors”.
SOURCE: ALLAFRICA
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