Washington, DC:
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today approved
South Africa’s request for emergency financial assistance of SDR 3,051.2
million (US$ 4,286.5 million or 100 percent of quota) under
the Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI)
to meet the urgent balance of payment (BOP) needs stemming from the
outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The pandemic is evolving in South Africa at a challenging time. With severe
structural constraints to growth, economic activity has weakened over the
last decade despite significant government spending, resulting in high
unemployment, poverty, and income inequality. Like in other emerging
economies, financial market volatility has increased during the pandemic,
but the financial system is showing resilience.
The RFI will help fill the urgent BOP needs originating from the fiscal
pressures posed by the pandemic, limit regional spillovers, and catalyze
additional financing from other international financial institutions. It
will complement the authorities’ strong policy response to the crisis and
their planned post-COVID-19 fiscal consolidation and reforms to promote
growth that benefits all South Africans. The authorities have committed to
manage the IMF’s emergency financial assistance with full transparency and
accountability.
Following the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Geoffrey Okamoto, First
Deputy Managing Director and Acting Chair, issued the following statement:
“South Africa’s economy has been severely hit by the COVID-19 crisis,
reporting the highest number of cases in sub-Saharan Africa. A deep
economic recession is unfolding as the decline in domestic activity and
disruptions in the global supply chain resulting from the COVID-19 shock
have added to a pre-existing situation of structural constraints, subdued
growth, and deteriorating social outcomes.
“The authorities responded swiftly to the crisis. The June Supplementary Budget Review presented to Parliament contains a
plan to reprioritize budget appropriations toward health and mitigation
spending and devote additional budgetary outlays to protect the poor, the
unemployed, and the most affected businesses. The South African Reserve
Bank (SARB) took strong and timely action by lowering significantly the
policy rate and ensuring adequate liquidity conditions in the financial
system.
“The emergency financing under the RFI will help fill the urgent BOP needs that emerged as a result of the pandemic and thus contain the economic
disruption and its regional spillovers. The RFI will also help catalyze
other disbursements. The authorities’ commitment to transparently monitor
and report all use of emergency funds is crucial to ensuring
COVID-19-related spending reaches the targeted objectives.
“There is a pressing need to strengthen economic fundamentals and ensure
debt sustainability by carrying out fiscal consolidation, improving the
governance and operations of SOEs, and implementing other growth-enhancing
structural reforms. The COVID-19 crisis heightens the urgency of
implementing these efforts to achieve sustainable and inclusive growth.
Specific reform commitments at the time of the October Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement will be a critical step to
buttress the credibility of the reform efforts and should be followed by
steadfast implementation. Efforts to preserve the central bank’s inflation
mandate and proactive bank regulation and supervision, particularly for
small banks, will also be important."
More information:
IMF Lending Tracker (emergency financing request approved by the IMF
Executive Board)
https://www.imf.org/en/Topics/imf-and-covid19/COVID-Lending-Tracker
IMF Executive Board calendar
https://www.imf.org/external/NP/SEC/bc/eng/index.aspx