IMF approves $261 million disbursement to Ethiopia

The International Monetary Fund's Executive Board has approved a $261 million disbursement to Ethiopia after completing the fourth review of its Extended Credit Facility program. This raises the total funding under the four-year, $3.4 billion initiative to $2.183 billion, aiding the country's balance of payments and fiscal needs. The decision endorses Ethiopia's progress in economic reforms aimed at macroeconomic stability and private sector growth.

The IMF's approval supports Ethiopia's Homegrown Economic Reform Agenda, which seeks to resolve macroeconomic imbalances and foster private sector-led growth. The review confirms that the country has met all quantitative targets and most indicative goals under the program. IMF Deputy Managing Director Nigel Clarke stated that Ethiopian authorities are "making progress in advancing their economic reform agenda," with measures yielding "encouraging results." He stressed that "maintaining the reform momentum remains key to the promising macroeconomic outlook."

Key advancements include stabilizing the foreign exchange market through limited central bank interventions to auctions, export growth, tax revenue enhancements, and inflation reduction, all bolstering economic stability. However, the IMF urges sustained reform efforts to achieve lasting growth and poverty alleviation. On fiscal matters, strong revenue collection and tax reforms are praised, alongside calls for prudent spending, tax base expansion, and phasing out fuel subsidies while protecting social spending.

Progress in debt restructuring is highlighted, with the recent agreement under the Common Framework with official creditors welcomed as a positive step. The IMF calls for expedited talks with private creditors to ensure debt sustainability. It also advises curbing new commercial borrowing and prioritizing development projects. The National Bank of Ethiopia's governance reforms, aimed at enhancing autonomy and curbing shadow banking in forex, receive endorsement. This disbursement will assist in meeting Ethiopia's external financing and budget requirements amid ongoing reforms.

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The International Monetary Fund has reached a staff-level agreement with Ethiopia on the fourth review of its $3.4 billion Extended Credit Facility arrangement. This agreement paves the way for a $261 million disbursement, bringing total financial assistance to $2.13 billion. The IMF urged continued forex reforms and fiscal discipline to support economic stability.

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