Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) approved today a disbursement of US$80.77 million
(SDR60.2 million) under the
Food Shock Window
of the Rapid Credit Facility to help Burkina Faso address urgent balance of
payment needs related to the global food crisis.
Food insecurity in Burkina Faso has increased significantly owing to
deteriorating security conditions, which led to the displacement of about 2
million people; unfavorable climate events; supply-chain disruptions
following the COVID-19 pandemic; Russia’s war in Ukraine; and increasing
prices for food and agricultural inputs such as fertilizer and seed. As a
result, about 16 percent of the population is in acute food insecurity
conditions.
The authorities also face significant macroeconomic challenges. External
and fiscal buffers eroded substantially in 2022, as the current account
deficit reached 5.2 percent of GDP while the overall fiscal balance widened
to 10.3 percent of GPD. Both deteriorations reflect persistent and
overlapping exogenous shocks, including a volatile political environment;
fragile and deteriorating security conditions; the war in Ukraine; and the
post-pandemic disruptions in international supply-chains. All these shocks
adversely affected economic activity in Burkina Faso, where growth in 2022
decelerated to 2.5 percent year-on-year, after 6.9 percent of GDP in 2021,
and widened macroeconomic imbalances.
Following the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Kenji Okamura, Deputy
Managing Director and acting Chair, issued the following statement:
“Burkina Faso has been hit by several shocks, including deteriorating
security conditions, unfavorable climate events, and Russia’s war in
Ukraine, which triggered higher energy and agricultural input prices and
reduced food access for poor households. Emergency financial assistance
under the RCF’s Food Shock Window (RCF-FSW) would help address urgent
balance-of-payments needs and mitigate the impact of the food crisis on the
most vulnerable.
“The authorities’ crisis response appropriately focuses on providing
immediate food assistance to affected households, preventing malnutrition
and improving drinking water supply, and protecting livestock and animal
husbandry. Measures to enhance transparency and governance in the use of
Fund resources allocated under the FSW are needed. The authorities are
committed to improving Public Financial Management practices and
progressing toward the establishment of the Treasury Single Account. The
plans to prepare progress reports and audits on the implementation of the
cash transfer program and all food emergency spending are important.
Identification and publication of the beneficial owners of entities awarded
public procurement contracts related to measures to address the food crisis
would be key.
“The authorities recognize that stronger engagement with the IMF would
support their efforts to achieve macroeconomic stability, obtain additional
external support, and build foundations for long-term development. Their
longer-term focus on building fiscal space to support higher growth and
poverty reduction and durably improving food security is appropriate.