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Govt
prints $21 trillion to pay IMF
The Zimbabwe
Independent
February 17, 2006
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/news/2006/February/Friday17/4230.html
GOVERNMENT printed
a staggering $21 trillion to buy foreign currency to pay off International
Monetary Fund (IMF) arrears, Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono said
yesterday.
The move, which
will avert expulsion but not avail much-needed balance-of-payments
support, is set to stoke inflation and push the local currency against
the wall.
Gono said printing
money and resultant broad money supply growth was the major driver
of inflation in 2005 and has spilled over into the current year.
He said the country had no choice but to print money to pay its
IMF arrears.
Printing of
money fuels broad money supply growth which, together with the yawning
8,6% budget deficit and other factors such as state borrowing, is
the major cause of inflation.
Broad money
supply growth has been on a sharp upward trend, from 177,6% in January
to 411,5% in November last year. Inflation this week surged to 613,2%
for January from the December rate of 585,8%.
"The collectivity
of Zimbabweans must realise that this high growth in money supply
was occasioned by printing of $21 trillion to buy foreign currency
to pay the IMF," Gono said.
He said there
was no budget for the IMF payment in the 2006 financial year and
the money could also not be feasibly absorbed in a single fiscal
year "without imposing a perilous squeeze on critical public sector
services".
Gono's disclosures
yesterday effectively settle the question of where the government
got the foreign currency to pay the IMF. Zimbabwe has paid a total
of US$210,6 million to the IMF in recent months. This sparked a
storm of controversy with accusations by some businessmen that the
money was seized from corporate foreign currency accounts.
South Africa-based
tycoon Mutumwa Mawere accused the central bank of raiding his nationalised
companies to pay the IMF.
Zimbabwe on
Wednesday made a further payment of US$9 million to the IMF to settle
its remaining overdue financial obligations to the General Resources
Account (GRA).
However, Zimbabwe
still has substantial overdue obligations to the Poverty Reduction
and Growth Facility (PRGF)-Exogenous Shocks Facility Trust (ESF)
amounting to US$119 million.
"The clearance
of GRA arrears by Zimbabwe has no effect on the application of the
Fund's procedures for the treatment of outstanding arrears to the
PRGF-ESF Trust," the IMF said.
"Zimbabwe, therefore,
remains excluded from the list of PRGF-eligible countries."
Although the
debt payment will guarantee that Zimbabwe will not be expelled from
the IMF, it will not get critically needed balance-of-payments support.
Zimbabwe has
been given four successive six-month grace periods to settle its
arrears and introduce economic reforms to avoid expulsion from the
IMF.
The IMF board
will next month look into the other sanctions against Harare which
include the suspension of Zimbabwe's voting and related rights,
ineligibility to use fund resources under the GRA and declaration
of non-cooperation, as well as suspension of technical assistance.
Zimbabwe was
on September 24 2001 declared ineligible to use the general resources
of the IMF, and removed from the list of countries which could borrow
resources under the PRGF due to non-payment.
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