By Songa Wa Songa and Florence Mugarula,The Citizen Reporter
In Summary
- The Bretton Woods body says the government, faced with tax shortfalls and aid freeze by donors, has resorted to heavy borrowing through the central bank and this may impact negatively on the market.
- The mission said the upcoming mid-year Budget review with the state would be used to align expenditure allocations with available resources
Dar es Salaam. The
International Monetary Fund (IMF) has raised the alarm over the
inability of the government to control its appetite for spending above
its means, warning that the trend could distabilise Tanzania’s monetary
policy.
An IMF mission report released on Tuesday noted
that the government, faced with tax shortfalls and aid freeze by donors,
has resorted to heavy borrowing through the central bank and this may
impact negatively on the market.
According to IMF, the government needs to urgently re-align its spending priorities with what it can afford.
“Front-loading of domestically-financed capital
expenditure in July and August was facilitated by the Bank of Tanzania
(BoT) through conversion of liquidity paper into financing paper but
this complicated monetary policy implementation,” it said.
The mission said the upcoming mid-year Budget
review with the state would be used to align expenditure allocations
with available resources.
“The expected implementation of VAT reforms in
early 2015 should help bolster the revenue base,” IMF noted in the brief
that usually follows meetings with top government leaders.
The warning yesterday coincided with a stinging
attack on the donor community by Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda who
stopped short of accusing development partners of patronising the state.
Mr Pinda expressed the government’s frustrations
over donors who have withheld nearly Sh1 trillion in budget support for
the current financial year, saying the only solution to evade
embarrassment was to “completely avoid budget dependence.”
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