IMF Board Approves $570 Mln Credit Facility for Chad
The International Monetary Fund approved a three-year
extended credit facility worth $570 million for Chad, the Fund said it is
capping a process that required Chad to restructure all its official and
commercial debt.
The approval allows the IMF to immediately disburse more
than $78 million, the lender said in a statement on Friday.
The IMF had conditioned any new agreement with Chad on a
restructuring of all its debt. Reuters reported last month that Glencore,
Chad’s largest private creditor, had offered assurances over the restructuring
of about $1 billion in commercial debt.
Humanitarian
“The Chadian economy continues to face significant
humanitarian and social demands.” The IMF’s Deputy Managing Director, Kenji
Okamura. He cited an expected increase in food insecurity and poverty, while a
growing number of refugees fleeing social conflicts in neighboring countries
complicates the humanitarian situation.
The Fund said restoring Chad’s debt sustainability relies on
a “multi-year fiscal consolidation program, significant donor support, and deep
debt restructuring under the G20 Common Framework.”
In January, Chad was the first country to request a
restructuring under new rules agreed last year by the G20 and the Paris Club of
lenders.
China, France, India and Saudi Arabia, Chad’s official
creditor committee, agreed in June to a restructuring under the G20 Common
Framework.
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