Washington, DC:
On January 21, 2021, the Executive Board of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation
[1]
with the Republic of Tajikistan.
Tajikistan is recovering rapidly from the negative COVID-19 shock.
After growing by 4.5 percent in 2020, the economy expanded by 8.9
percent in the first nine months of 2021 due to strong industrial
activity and domestic demand, supported by public investment and robust
remittance inflows. While the current account surplus has decline
somewhat as imports pickup in line with the recovery, international
reserves remain well above adequacy metrics. Inflation remains somewhat
above the NBT’s target range (6±2 percent) mainly due to higher global
food and fuel prices.
As prospects have brightened, the stimulus provided by more
accommodative fiscal and monetary policies during the pandemic has been
gradually withdrawn in 2021. Banking system stability has improved with
the closure of problematic banks, supporting the flow of credit to the
private sector. Along with help from international partners, COVID
vaccination rates have increased, and reported infection rates have
remained low.
Looking ahead, the recovery is expected to continue. Real GDP growth is
projected to come in at 7.0 percent in 2021, but moderate to 5.5
percent in 2022 as the impact of pent-up demand (reflecting a rebound
in remittances) and base effects fade. Over the medium term, growth is
projected to stay around 4 percent of GDP with inflation falling within
the NBT target range. Risks to the outlook remain tilted to the
downside due to uncertainty regarding the pandemic and regional
spillovers. A new wave of infections (possibly associated with the
deteriorating COVID situation in some key trading partners) could
undercut the recovery. Regional security and geopolitical tensions
could jeopardize economic prospects. From a domestic perspective,
delayed SOE reforms, limited competition, structural rigidities, and
incipient financial sector vulnerabilities could also derail growth and
keep inflation elevated.
Executive Board Assessment
[2]
Executive Directors agreed with the thrust of the staff appraisal.
They commended the Tajik authorities’ prompt policy response, which
has mitigated the economic and health impact of the pandemic and
underpinned a strong recovery. Given high uncertainty about the
pandemic and limited fiscal space, Directors underscored that
carefully calibrated policies and key structural reforms are needed
to foster a more durable and sustainable recovery and safeguard
macroeconomic stability.
Directors stressed the need for fiscal discipline to ensure that debt
remains on a sustainable downward trajectory given the high risk of
debt distress. They agreed that achieving the 2022 fiscal targets will
require tight expenditure control and additional measures if revenue
shortfalls emerge. Over the medium term, Directors recommended
introducing an operational fiscal anchor, complemented with steps to
phase out tax exemptions, broaden the tax base, and improve public
spending efficiency and transparency.
Directors agreed that a restrictive monetary policy stance remains
warranted given inflationary pressures. Noting the authorities’ plans
to transition to an inflation targeting regime, they emphasized that
this will require further reforms, including a gradual move toward
exchange rate flexibility over the medium term and a further upgrade of
the central bank’s governance framework.
Directors called on the authorities to continue strengthening the
macroprudential policy framework and banking supervision, including by
integrating beneficial ownership information into the supervisory
process. They encouraged the authorities to enact the new AML/CFT law,
complete the ongoing bank resolutions transparently, rebuild the
buffers of the deposit insurance fund, and improve the crisis
management framework.
Directors stressed the importance of prioritizing structural reforms to
improve the business climate, attract investment, and support a
sustainable recovery. They called for accelerating reforms across
state-owned enterprises (SOEs), particularly to improve their
governance and transparency, and gradually adjust electricity tariffs
toward cost recovery while strengthening the social safety net to
protect vulnerable populations. Directors encouraged adopting a public
procurement law consistent with best international practices and
implementing anti-corruption policies. They also called on the
authorities to reengage with the Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiative and to follow through with their adaptation strategies to
enhance climate resilience. Directors noted that achieving the
country’s development goals calls for higher investments in healthcare,
education, and infrastructure.
They took positive note of the authorities’ interest in a potential
arrangement with the Fund to support their reform agenda.