Washington, DC –
the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today approved
the disbursement of SDR 275.6 million (50 percent of quota, about US$375
million) under the Rapid Credit Facility (RCF) and the Rapid Financing
Instrument (RFI). This will help to meet Uzbekistan’s increased need for
fiscal and urgent balance of payments financing arising from the impact of
the COVID-19 crisis.
The crisis has adversely affected Uzbekistan’s macroeconomic outlook.
Growth is projected to slow to 1½ percent this year and lower revenues and
additional crisis-related expenditures—on healthcare and to support
households and firms—are expected to widen the fiscal deficit to about 4
percent of GDP. IMF and other donor support will help cover the resulting
financing needs, support the economy, and provide assistance to affected
households and firms. The authorities will increase the accountability and
transparency of expenditures to improve the efficiency and safeguard the
use of public resources.
The authorities’ policies are expected to maintain macroeconomic stability
and fiscal and balance of payments’ sustainability over the medium-term.
They have expressed their strong commitment to continue economic and
structural reforms. The IMF stands ready to provide policy advice and
further support, as needed.
Following the Executive Board discussions, Mr. Tao Zhang, Deputy Managing
Director and Chair, made the following statement:
“The COVID-19 pandemic has severely impacted Uzbekistan’s economy. Growth
is projected to slow significantly while lower exports and remittances will
widen the current account deficit. The fiscal deficit is expected to
increase on the back of a fall in revenues and crisis-related expenditures.
These have generated significant balance of payments and fiscal financing
needs.
“IMF financial assistance under the RCF and the RFI, along with support
from other multilateral institutions, will help cover Uzbekistan’s fiscal
and balance of payments needs and mitigate the impact on its foreign
exchange reserves. It will also provide resources to support increased
crisis spending for healthcare, social protection, and public support for
affected firms and households.
“As the higher fiscal and external financing needs primarily arise from the
COVID-19 shock, a temporary loosening of fiscal and monetary policies is
appropriate. As the crisis subsides, the focus should revert to ensuring
medium-term fiscal and external sustainability. Fiscal policy should aim
for a return to moderate fiscal deficits and limit external borrowing so
that public sector debt stays on a sustainable path.
“On monetary and financial sector policies, the authorities should continue
developing their inflation targeting framework focused on price stability
while allowing the exchange rate to move in line with fundamentals. They
should also continue to provide appropriate liquidity support to the
financial system, while continuing rigorous financial supervision and
maintaining capital requirements and loan standards.
“Uzbekistan aims to continue implementing its structural reform agenda, to
complete the transformation to a modern, open market economy, and to
improve governance and public management. It has committed to safeguard the
use and improve the efficiency of its public resources by increasing
transparency and accountability.”