The International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen outside the
headquarters building in Washington, US, on September 4, 2018. PHOTO |
REUTERS
The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) executive board approved
a bailout worth nearly $449 million for OPEC member Congo Republic on
Thursday, potentially setting a precedent for other nations struggling
under the weight of large debts to China.
Congo’s
economy suffered from a sharp drop in crude prices in 2014, and debt
levels had ballooned to 118 percent of GDP by 2017. But even as its oil
producing neighbours secured IMF programs, Congo’s negotiations for a
bailout dragged on for two years.
The Fund demanded
that Congo ensure the long-term sustainability of its debt as a
precondition for a three-year extended credit facility programs.
Congo reached an agreement to restructure a portion of its Chinese debt in April.
“The
recent agreement to restructure the Republic of Congo’s bilateral debt
should be accompanied by continued good-faith efforts to restructure
commercial debt,” said IMF Deputy Managing Director Mitsuhiro Furusawa.
Congo’s Chinese debt stood at nearly 1.48 trillion CFA francs ($2.56 billion) at the end of March.
Under terms of the restructuring deal, repayment of 944 billion
CFA francs will be extended an additional 15 years. Congo, however, must
pay off a third of that amount by the end of 2021 and China will not
reduce the amount of principal owed, a process known as taking a
haircut.
“There is a substantial reduction in the
amount of debt service that would have been required during the program
period,” Alex Segura, IMF mission chief for Congo, told Reuters.
The extension of the debt’s maturity will also ease Congo’s debt service burden in following years, he said.
TEST CASE
Many observers see Congo as a test case for the IMF.
A
number of African countries facing unsustainable debt resulting from
commercial borrowing, a boom in Eurobond issues and years of Chinese
lending on the continent are expected to turn to the IMF for help in the
coming years.
“The IMF is tacitly accepting that China
will not take a haircut on debts to African governments,” said one
banker, who has followed the negotiations.
The IMF is
also advising Congo’s government to restructure high-interest debt it
contracted with oil traders including Glencore and Trafigura despite a
previous pledge to the Fund that it would not engage in oil-backed
borrowing.
“I think they’ve learned their lesson as to the costs of these kinds of practices,” Segura said.
To
qualify for the IMF program, Congo’s government has undertaken a series
of reforms to improve transparency in the management of public
resources, particularly in its traditionally opaque oil sector.
But
natural resource transparency advocacy group Global Witness complained
that details of oil-backed loan agreements and major infrastructure
contracts remained largely hidden.
“The IMF’s decision
to grant Congo another bailout is a concerning case of institutional
amnesia and undermines the Fund’s renewed anti-corruption drive,” said
Global Witness oil researcher Natasha White.
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