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Zim
pays another US$2.5m to IMF
Nelson
Banya,The Financial Gazette (Zimbabwe)
January 19, 2006
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/story.aspx?stid=556
THE government
has made another US$2.5 million payment to the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), ahead of a routine visit by a staff delegation from
the Bretton Woods institution.
The IMF delegation visits Zimbabwe next week to assess Harare's
commitment to fiscal discipline and the effective turnaround of
the economy.
The last IMF
mission, which was in the country in September 2005, expressed "deep
concern over the continued sharp economic and social decline in
Zimbabwe, with prospects of continued triple-digit inflation, further
output declines, and increased poverty," and since then both Treasury
and monetary authorities have moved to try to arrest the decline.
The IMF staff team, which will visit Zimbabwe between January 25
and February 1, will meet government and central bank officials
as well as industry representatives during the routine Article IV
consultations, which precede an executive board meeting — to consider
Zimbabwe's possible expulsion from the fund — in March.
Economic commentator Eric Bloch does not expect the latest visit
by the IMF delegation to be any different from previous consultations,
the looming directors' meeting notwithstanding.
"There has never really been any threat of expulsion, just the hype
in some international circles to try and frighten us. The motion
would require 85 percent of the total votes," Bloch said.
The IMF gave
Zimbabwe another six-month reprieve against compulsory withdrawal
from the fund last September, citing the country's increased payments
to the IMF as well as certain positive policy steps taken to right
the economy.
The former Czechoslovakia remains the only country in history to
be expelled from the IMF.
Bloch said
although he expects further economic decline, "certainly in the
first half of the year", the IMF might find positives in recent
policies put in place by the government.
"I think they will commend the government's commitment to restrict
borrowing to capital projects and not consumption, as was the case
previously. They might also take heart in the pledge, by government,
to reduce the budget deficit to less than five percent of GDP, remove
all price controls. There has also been the freeing up of the foreign
exchange market.
"Concerns, however, remain on the level of the national debt, inflation
and lack of investment," Bloch said.
Inflation, which has been resurgent since the second quarter of
2005, closed the year at 585.8 percent and remains a massive challenge
in 2006.
The last time
an IMF team was in Zimbabwe, the central bank maintained its managed
foreign currency auction, where the local unit traded at $26 000
against the US$. However, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe floated the
local unit in October, and it is now trading at about $93 000 per
greenback. Worries remain, however, over the 70 percent retention
scheme which the central bank has maintained.
The central bank has also discontinued much of the quasi-fiscal
activity sharply criticised by the IMF the last time around.
The IMF called for strong fiscal adjustment; full liberalisation
of the exchange rate regime; adoption of a strong monetary anchor;
elimination of all quasi-fiscal activity by the Reserve Bank of
Zimbabwe (RBZ) and the absorption of RBZ losses by the budget.
Zimbabwe has, over the past year, stepped up payments to the IMF
and has significantly reduced its arrears with the fund.
Last August, Zimbabwe paid the Fund US$120 million (SDR 82 million)
to settle its arrears to the General Resource Account (GRA). Subsequent
payments have seen Zimbabwe's total arrears under the GRA coming
down to US$25 million and those to the Poverty Reduction Growth
Fund (PRGF) Trust are SDR 82 million (about US$121 million).
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