Washington, DC:
Mr.
Abebe Aemro Selassie, Director of the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) African Department,
has today issued the following statement on Chad:
“Chad’s economic and financing situation continues to worsen following the
combined shocks of the COVID-19 pandemic, oil price decline, climate
change, and terrorist attacks. IMF staff and the Chadian authorities have
continued a close dialogue on economic policies. Recent discussions confirm
growing concerns about financing difficulties, forcing the government to
cut critical social and development outlays, which, unless soon reversed,
could have serious negative social and security consequences.
“Chad’s debt is assessed as unsustainable. A debt treatment is therefore
critical and would pave the way for the IMF’s Executive Board to approve
financing in support of Chad’s program of carefully targeted fiscal
adjustment and
reforms that were agreed with IMF staff in January. It would also open the door for the provision of significant financial
support by other development partners.
“Official creditors in the Creditor Committee for Chad under the Common
Framework for Debt Treatments beyond the DSSI (Common Framework), have,
in their statement
of June 16, supported Chad’s envisaged IMF-supported program and committed
to negotiate debt restructuring terms accordingly. Comparable treatment
from Chad’s private creditors is now necessary.
“A credible debt restructuring process with private creditors is needed to
unlock the official financing that Chad urgently needs. A strong commitment
from private creditors on their willingness to negotiate such debt
treatments consistent with the parameters of the envisaged IMF-supported
program without further delay would help boost Chad’s economic recovery and
poverty reduction efforts. The
IMF’s Managing Director
has also endorsed the call by the Creditor Committee for private creditors
to commit to negotiate such debt treatment without delay. The international
community will be monitoring developments closely and looks forward to
concrete progress in the engagement between Chad and its private creditors
in the coming days.”
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