Washington, DC: The
Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved today a
42-month arrangement under the
Extended Credit Facility
of SDR 293.60 million or about US$390 million (200 percent of quota), with
an immediate disbursement of SDR51.380 million (about US$68.3 million).
Following a series of shocks in recent years, Togo continues to face
headwinds, including more difficult access to financing following monetary
policy tightening in advanced economies, a challenging security situation
at the northern border, and persistent food insecurity compounded by
climate change. Fiscal deficits and debt have increased, reversing the debt
reduction achieved during the 2017–20 ECF-arrangement, eroding fiscal space
and buffers to absorb shocks, and contributing to regional vulnerabilities.
The authorities’ strong reform program aims to help maintain macroeconomic
stability and accelerate poverty reduction by (i) making growth more
inclusive while strengthening debt sustainability, and (ii) conducting
structural reforms to support growth and limit fiscal and financial sector
risks. Key policies include a strengthening of social spending and the
social safety net, a growth-friendly fiscal consolidation thanks in part to
ambitious fiscal revenue mobilization, structural reforms to support growth
by enhancing the business environment, and banking sector reform including
recapitalization of the remaining state-owned bank.
At the conclusion of the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Okamura,
Deputy Managing Director, and Acting Chair, issued the following
statement:
“Following the shocks of recent years (the COVID pandemic, terrorist
attacks, and spikes in global food and fuel prices), Togo continues to face
headwinds, including more difficult access to financing following monetary
policy tightening in advanced economies, a still challenging security
situation at the northern border, and persistent food insecurity compounded
by climate change. To address these challenges, the authorities have
requested a 42-Month Arrangement under the Extended Credit Facility. The
program will help accelerate poverty reduction, maintain macroeconomic
stability, and catalyze further external financing, benefitting not only
Togo but the WAEMU region.
The authorities intend to make growth more inclusive by strengthening
social spending and social safety nets as well as enhancing the living
conditions of populations in the north of the country, thereby
complementing the military response to terrorism with a civilian response.
In this context, it will be important to substitute generalized fuel
subsidies with more targeted and cost-effective measures to protect the
vulnerable, including through cash transfers.
The authorities should continue their efforts at growth-friendly fiscal
consolidation to create space for spending on Togo’s development needs while
strengthening debt sustainability. In this context, the impressive start of
fiscal consolidation in 2023 is praiseworthy. The Government’s intention to
raise tax revenue by an ambitious 0.5 percent of GDP per year is also
welcome. For these efforts to succeed, broadening the tax base by
streamlining tax expenditures will be critical.
The authorities should continue efforts at enhancing the business
environment to support growth—including by strengthening the governance,
anti-corruption, and AML/CFT frameworks—along with their commitment to
reform the remaining state-owned bank to reduce risks to financial sector
stability. The provision of budget resources for the bank’s
recapitalization to zero regulatory capital is a welcome first step.”
Annex
Fiscal deficits and debt have increased, reversing the debt reduction
achieved during the 2017–20 ECF-arrangement, eroding fiscal space and
buffers to absorb shocks, and contributing to regional vulnerabilities in
the West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU). Two undercapitalized
banks, one state-owned and the other recently privatized, pose risks to
financial sector stability and associated fiscal risks. The authorities are
requesting financial support of 200 percent of quota (SDR 293.60 million)
under a 42-month ECF-arrangement.
Program Summary
The Fund-supported program aims to help maintain macroeconomic stability
and accelerate poverty reduction by (i) making growth more inclusive while
strengthening debt sustainability, and (ii) conducting structural reforms
to support growth and limit fiscal and financial sector risks. Key policies
include a strengthening of social spending and the social safety net, a
large fiscal consolidation thanks in part to ambitious fiscal revenue
mobilization, and banking sector reform including recapitalization of the
remaining state-owned bank. By providing and catalyzing concessional
financing for budget purposes, the program will help ease trade-offs
between enhancing inclusion through higher social spending and
strengthening debt sustainability. It will also help maintain macroeconomic
and external stability in the WAEMU.
Make growth more inclusive. The authorities will make
growth more inclusive by strengthening social spending and implementing an
investment program to improve living conditions in the terrorism-affected
Savanes region and neighboring regions, thereby complementing the military
response to the terrorist threat with a civilian response.
A medium-term fiscal framework. The authorities will
strengthen debt sustainability through a large fiscal consolidation in line
with a dual fiscal anchor. The anchor’s first element is to reduce the
overall risk of debt distress from high to moderate (PV of public debt
below 55 percent of GDP) by end-2026, the last full year before the end of
the program in mid-2027. The second element is to lower the fiscal deficit
to 3 percent of GDP by 2025 to avoid overtaxing the regional market’s
ability to provide financing, in line with the (currently suspended)
regional convergence framework. To create space for priority spending, the
authorities are committed to raising revenue by an ambitious 0.5 percent of
GDP every year.
Structural reforms. To support growth and limit fiscal and
financial sector risks, the authorities will strengthen public financial
management, improve the business environment, and ensure the reform of the
remaining state-owned bank that was not completed under preceding programs.
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Togo: Selected Economic Indicators
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2022
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2023
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2024
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2025
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Estimates
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Projections
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National Income and Prices
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(percentage change)
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Real GDP
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5.8
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5.4
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5.3
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5.3
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Real GDP per capita
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3.3
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2.9
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2.8
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2.8
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Consumer price index
(average)
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7.6
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5.1
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2.7
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2.0
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Money and Credit
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(percentage change)
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Credit to nongovernment sector
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10.7
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2.6
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9.2
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6.8
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Broad money
(M2)
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14.9
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8.2
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8.8
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8.6
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Central Government Finance
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(percent of GDP)
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Revenue
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15.1
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15.5
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16.3
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16.9
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Tax revenue
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13.9
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14.4
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14.9
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15.4
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Total expenditure
and net lending
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26.0
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24.9
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23.3
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21.4
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Overall balance
(cash basis, incl.
grants)
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-8.3
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-6.6
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-6.4
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-3.0
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Basic primary fiscal balance
(excl.
banking sector operations)
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-4.5
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-2.5
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-0.5
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1.2
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External Sector
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Current account balance
(percent of
GDP)
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-4.2
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-3.3
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-3.6
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-3.5
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Terms of trade (percent change;
deterioration = –)
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9.7
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1.6
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-2.2
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-1.5
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Public Debt
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(percent of GDP)
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Total public debt
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66.5
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67.4
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68.8
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66.9
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External public debt
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26.2
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25.6
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26.9
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27.1
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Domestic public debt
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40.3
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41.8
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41.9
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39.8
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0.0
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0.0
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0.0
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0.0
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Sources: Togolese authorities and
IMF staff estimates and projections.
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