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IMF reaches staff-level agreement with Tanzania on $790M Climate Resilience and Sustainability Facility Financing

IMF reaches staff-level agreement with Tanzania on $790M Climate Resilience and Sustainability Facility Financing

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  • The Tanzanian authorities and the IMF have reached staff-level agreement on a reform program to address climate change challenges supported by the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF), and the completion of the third review under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF).
  • The RSF will support the authorities’ efforts to advance structural reforms and investments on adaptation and mitigation to address risks and challenges associated with climate change.
  • Economic growth is recovering from the impacts of the unfavorable global economic environment and domestic factors. Near-term policy priorities include exchange rate flexibility and growth-friendly fiscal consolidation, while increasing priority social spending. Medium-term reform priorities continue to center on creating fiscal space, modernizing the monetary policy framework and financial supervision, and advancing structural reforms.

A staff team from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) led by Charalambos Tsangarides, IMF mission chief for Tanzania, held meetings in Dodoma and Dar es Salaam from May 2 to 17, 2024, for the third review under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF). Subject to approval by the IMF Executive Board the review will make available SDR113.3 million (about US$150 million), bringing the total IMF financial support under the arrangement to SDR455.5 million (about US$604.2 million). The team also discussed the authorities’ request to access under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) in the amount of 150 percent of quota (SDR 596.7 million, approximately US$789.6 million).

At the conclusion of the mission, Mr. Tsangarides issued the following statement:

I am pleased to announce that we have reached staff-level agreement on the policies needed to complete the third review of Tanzania’s ECF-supported program, and on the request to access financial resources from the RSF. The IMF’s Executive Board will discuss these requests in the coming weeks.

The Tanzanian economy grew 5.1 percent in 2023 despite headwinds from power outages and strained foreign exchange liquidity that dampened manufacturing and trade activities. Inflation remains within the Bank of Tanzania (BoT) target at 3.1 percent (yoy) although core inflation ticked up to 3.9 percent (yoy) in April 2024. The outlook is favorable with growth expected to pick up to 5.4 percent in 2024 supported by improvements in the business environment and subsiding global commodity prices. Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside, as intensification of regional conflicts, increased commodity price volatility, abrupt global slowdown, prolonged liquidity issues in the foreign exchange (FX) market, and intensification of floods from El Nino, could weigh negatively on economic outlook.

The current account deficit is expected to narrow to 4.3 percent of GDP this fiscal year, from 6.5 percent in FY2022/23. However, external financial conditions are expected to remain tight and pressures in the foreign exchange market are likely to persist. The BoT reiterated its commitment to allow more exchange rate flexibility to revitalize the FX interbank market and ensure a market determined exchange rate, while limiting FX interventions to avoid disorderly market conditions, in line with its intervention policy. To enhance the transparency of its interventions, the BoT will publish the results of its FX auctions. Maintaining a moderately tight monetary policy stance will complement efforts to ease pressures in the FX market, while preserving price stability.

The government continues to implement its growth-friendly fiscal consolidation plan envisaged in the FY2023/24 budget. This effort is expected to continue in FY2024/25, supported by tax policy and revenue administration efforts to help create fiscal space. The government is committed to increase priority social spending and contain the impact of the recent floods on the most vulnerable. The authorities’ structural reform agenda aims to support a resilient, sustainable, and inclusive growth through improving the business environment and strengthening governance.

The RSF will support the authorities’ effort to address climate policy challenges and implement reforms to enhance the resilience and sustainability of the Tanzanian economy. The authorities are committed to enhancing governance and coordination of climate change policies; strengthening the disaster risk management framework; mainstreaming climate policies in budgeting and public investment planning; aligning sectoral climate policies with national policies and commitments; and enhancing supervision of financial sector climate-related risks. The RSF will provide additional concessional resources, to help accelerate implementation of the authorities’ climate reforms and investment and catalyze financing for climate change mitigation and adaptation.

Related Article: IMF staff, Rwanda agree $262 million credit facility to Boost Resilience, Combat Climate Change

The mission met with Minister of Finance, Dr. Mwigulu Nchemba, Bank of Tanzania Governor, Mr. Emmanuel Tutuba, other senior officials, development partners, and private sector representatives. The mission would like to thank the Tanzanian authorities for their cooperation, hospitality, and constructive discussions.

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