Monday, March 28, 2016

‘IMF to Resume Malawi Loan Program’
Malawi President Peter Mutharika.
March 28, 2016

LILONGWE— The International Monetary Fund will resume Malawi’s $150 million extended facility program which was suspended last year after a scandal involving abuse of state money, the country’s finance minister said last Thursday. “The IMF has given us a green-light to the resumption of the program which allows them to disburse about $30 million of the remainder of the total $150 million,” Goodall Gondwe said.

“The advice we get from the IMF is very important because they provide a very valuable yardstick of how we can manage our economy and we will continue doing well especially on public finance management so that we are not off track again.”

The IMF had suspended the program following a scandal in which senior government officials siphoned millions of dollars from state coffers. Other international donors, led by Malawi’s former colonial ruler, Britain, also halted direct aid to the southern African nation over the scandal.

IMF Mission chief Oral Williams said in a statement last Wednesday that Malawi had demonstrated a concerted effort to put the program back on track, including improvements in public financial management.

Malawi has struggled to grow its economy due to declining export earnings from tobacco and in the absence of aid, which had previously accounted for 40 percent of its budget.

The IMF said it expects Malawi’s economy to grow by 3 to 4 percent this year after expanding by 3 percent in 2015.

— Reuters.

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