Washington, DC:
On January 12, 2021, the IMF Executive Board concluded the annual
discussions with the Central African Economic and Monetary Community
(CEMAC) on Common Policies of Member Countries and Common Policies in
Support of Member Countries Reform Programs
[1]
.
The economic shock associated with the COVID-19 pandemic struck when the
economic outlook for the region was improving. Tight regional policies
helped maintain an improved external position in 2019. The current account
deficit shrank to 2.5% of GDP, and external reserves increased. Fiscal
balances remained broadly unchanged from 2018 at -0.3 percent of GDP,
bringing public debt to 52 percent of GDP. Overall regional growth was 1.9
percent in 2019.
While the pandemic seems to be under control in the region at the moment,
the related oil price shock led to a sharp deterioration of fiscal and
external balances in 2020. CEMAC is expected to experience a 3 percent
recession in 2020. The current account deficit is expected to worsen to 6.5
percent of GDP, and external reserve coverage to remain at 3.5 months of
imports of goods and services. The fiscal deficit would deteriorate to 3.8
percent of GDP, and public debt increase to 57 percent of GDP.
The policy response from national and regional authorities helped mitigate
the economic fallout in 2020. CEMAC governments announced various support
measures to firms and households in their revised budget laws. BEAC
quickly eased monetary policy and introduced accommodative measures to
ensure adequate liquidity in the banking system and stroke the right balance between supporting internal and external
stability. COBAC eased prudential regulations to help banks delay
pandemic-related losses. The Fund supported this response with significant emergency financing
for the region while three programs expired in 2020.
The shock is set to have long-lasting effects on the economic outlook for
the CEMAC. With lower medium-term oil prices, the outlook projects that
CEMAC’s fiscal and external adjustments will be slower than previously
envisaged, and risks are tilted to the downside. Growth is expected to
rebound in 2021 to 2.7 percent and continue to pick up gradually to around
3.5 percent in the medium term, as reforms to improve governance and the
business climate are assumed to slowly take hold. Balanced fiscal
consolidation efforts would increase non-oil revenues and contain
expenditure. Reserves are projected to be re-built at a slower pace than
previously envisaged but should reach the equivalent of 5 months of imports
by 2025. Inflation is projected to stay at around 2.5 percent over the
medium term, below the regional convergence criterion, as monetary policy
would remain appropriately tight. This outlook is highly uncertain and
contingent on the evolution of the pandemic and its impact on oil prices.
It also assumes a continuation of IMF-supported programs with Congo, CAR
and Equatorial Guinea, some additional IMF emergency assistance for the
region, and approval of three new IMF-supported programs (Cameroon, Chad,
and Gabon) in 2021. The region is at a critical juncture, as the second
phase of the regional strategy is about to begin. CEMAC’s regional
institutions and the national authorities should aim to radically transform
the region by implementing governance, transparency and business climate
reforms that will lay the basis for a diversified, inclusive and
sustainable growth.
Executive Board Assessment
[2]
Executive Directors agreed with the thrust of the staff appraisal. They
noted that the crisis associated with the COVID-19 pandemic struck when the
economic outlook for the CEMAC was improving. The crisis is expected to
have long lasting effects and CEMAC’s fiscal and external adjustments will
be slower than envisaged previously.
Directors recognized that the regional authorities’ policy response to
mitigate the immediate economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has been
pro-active and appropriate. They welcomed BEAC’s actions to loosen monetary
policy and quickly ease bank liquidity provision. Directors also viewed
steps taken by COBAC to strengthen banks’ capital and monitor financial
stability following the easing of prudential regulations as appropriate.
Directors considered that BEAC’s monetary policy stance continues to strike
the right balance between preserving internal and external stability. They
stressed that BEAC should stand ready to tighten monetary policy if the
external reserves position deteriorated further. Directors welcomed BEAC’s
resolve to continue to refrain from extending any type of direct monetary
financing to its member states. They encouraged BEAC to continue effective
implementation of the foreign exchange regulation. In this context,
Directors supported a dialogue with oil and mining companies to effectively
enforce the regulation to these sectors by end-2021 while taking account of
their specificities.
Directors urged the SG-COBAC to accelerate implementation of its strategic
plan for moving towards risk-based supervision as banks’ compliance with
prudential standards remains weak and resolution of problem banks has been
slow. They emphasized the need to reduce currently high non-performing
loans and continue efforts to limit a further increase in banks’ sovereign
exposure. Further efforts to strengthen AML/CFT implementation are also
needed. Directors noted that reinforcing SG-COBAC’s human resources would
be key to meeting these objectives.
Directors stressed that the CEMAC is at a crossroads and should aim at a
profound transformation. The second phase of the regional strategy must
decisively focus on implementing structural, transparency and governance
reforms to lay the basis for diversified, inclusive and sustainable growth
while aiming at rebuilding fiscal and external buffers.
Directors noted that BEAC was unable to fully implement the policy
assurance on NFA accumulation at end-December 2019 and end-June 2020
provided in the December 2019 Follow‑up Letter of Policy Support due to a
shortfall in external financing during the second half of 2019 and fiscal
deficit over-runs. They considered that BEAC has taken satisfactory
corrective measures to address the underperformance, including limited
monetary policy accommodation in response to the COVID-19 shock. Directors
endorsed the updated policy assurance outlined in the December 2020
Follow‑up Letter from the BEAC Governor on achieving the NFA accumulation
for end-December 2020 and end-June 2021. This assurance is based on BEAC’s
commitment to implement an adequately tight monetary policy together with
commitments by member states to implement adjustment policies in the
context of IMF‑supported programs. Directors emphasized that implementation
of this assurance will be critical for the success of IMF‑supported
programs with CEMAC member countries.
The views expressed by Directors will form part of the Article IV
consultation discussions on individual members of the CEMAC that take place
until the next Board discussion of common policies. It is expected that the
next discussion of CEMAC common policies will be held on the standard
12-month cycle.
[1]
Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds
bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. In the
context of these bilateral Article IV consultation discussion,
staff hold separate annual discussions with the regional
institutions responsible for common policies in four currency
unions – the Euro Area, the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union, the
Central African Economic and Monetary Union, and the West African
Economic and Monetary Union. For each of the currency unions, staff
teams visit the regional institutions responsible for common
policies in the currency union, collects economic and financial
information, and discusses with officials the currency union’s
economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the
staff prepares a report, which forms the basis of discussion by the
Executive Board. Both staff’s discussions with the regional
institutions and the Board discussion of the annual staff report
will be considered an integral part of the Article IV consultation
with each member.
[2]
At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as
Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors,
and this summary is transmitted to the country's authorities. An
explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found
here:
http://www.IMF.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm
.