Washington, DC:
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) completed
today the fifth review of the ECF arrangement with São Tomé and Príncipe.
The Board’s decision enables the immediate disbursement of SDR 1.90 million
(about US$2.48 million
[1]
). This brings São Tomé and Príncipe’s total disbursements under the
arrangement to SDR 12.90 million (about US$16.79 million).
In completing the fifth review, the Executive Board also approved the
authorities’ request for a waiver for nonobservance of continuous
performance criterion on non-accumulation of external arrears, based on
corrective measures taken by the authorities.
São Tomé and Príncipe’s 40-month ECF arrangement was approved on October 2,
2019 for SDR 13.32 million (about US$18.15 million or around 90 percent of
the country’s quota) (see
Press Release No. 19/363
). The program aims to support the government’s economic reform program to
restore macroeconomic stability, reduce debt vulnerability, alleviate
balance of payments pressures, and create the foundations for stronger and
more inclusive growth.
At the conclusion of the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Bo Li, Deputy
Managing Director and Acting Chair, made the following statement
[2]
:
“São Tomé and Príncipe’s performance under the program supported by the
IMF’s Extended Credit Facility Arrangement has been broadly satisfactory.
Macroeconomic stability has been maintained despite multiple challenges.
However, the short-term macroeconomic outlook is clouded by significant
uncertainty and downside risks due to spillovers from increasing
international food and fuel prices which could dampen economic activity,
worsen power outages and inflation, and adversely impact revenues and
implicit subsidies. Stepping up implementation of key infrastructure
projects and structural reforms and continued strong and flexible
engagement from the Fund will be critical to boost medium-term growth.
“Implementing growth friendly fiscal consolidation and strengthening
expenditure controls are key to achieving the authorities’ fiscal
objectives. Efforts to boost domestic revenue, including the implementation
of the VAT in 2022, and rationalize expenditures would support
growth-enhancing social and infrastructure development programs and put
public debt on a downward trajectory.
“Maintaining tighter monetary policy would address rising inflation,
strengthen reserve buffers, and support the exchange rate peg. In the short
term, this needs to be complemented by continued mobilization of external
grant inflows and implementation of other project financing commitments. In
the medium term, continued fiscal consolidation would help ease demand
pressures, increase fiscal space, and build a higher reserve buffer.
“Efforts to further strengthen the implementation of monetary policy and
financial legislative framework should remain a priority and focus on
approvals of the new Central Bank Law and the Financial Institutions Law,
and implementation of the remaining safeguards recommendations. Additional
efforts are also needed to strengthen supervisory capacity.
“A more comprehensive approach to implementing structural reforms is
critical. Those should aim at expanding tourism services, including a
comprehensive approach focused on developing human capital through
education programs, building climate-resilient infrastructure, expanding
transportation links, and improving the business environment. Efforts
should also focus on improving energy sector efficiency, enhancing
governance of public enterprises, and supporting targeted social transfer
programs.”
[1]
US dollar amounts have been calculated using today’s exchange rate:
(1 USD = SDR 0.768436).
[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
.