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Monetary Fund |
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The
IMF is an international organization of 183 member
countries, established to promote international monetary
cooperation, exchange stability, and orderly exchange
arrangements; to foster economic growth and high levels of
employment; and to provide temporary financial assistance
to countries to help ease balance of payments adjustment.
Press Release No. 00/68
December
14, 2000 |
International Monetary Fund
700 19th Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20431 USA |
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The Gambia To
Receive US$91 Million in Debt Service Relief: The IMF and
World Bank Support Debt Relief For The Gambia
Under The Enhanced HIPC Initiative
Washington,
December 14, 2000 - The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
and the World Bank Group's International Development
Association (IDA) agreed to support a comprehensive debt
reduction package for The Gambia under the enhanced
Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative. Total
relief from all of The Gambia's creditors is worth nearly
US$67 million in Net Present Value (NPV) terms 1,
which is equivalent to 27 percent of total debt
outstanding after the full use of traditional debt relief
mechanisms.
The enhanced HIPC Initiative will help The
Gambia to advance its poverty reduction programs and
stimulate economic growth. The debt reduction operation
will translate into debt-service relief over time of US$91
million. Debt service will be reduced by about 43 percent
over 2001-05 and 25 percent over 2006-15. This will create
room for additional public expenditures on poverty
reduction. The Gambia's eligibility for debt relief
under the enhanced HIPC Initiative is a recognition by the
international community of the progress made in
implementing economic reforms and achieving poverty
reduction.
The overall impact of the assistance
under the enhanced HIPC Initiative on The Gambia's
budget is substantial. External debt service as a
percentage of exports of goods and travel income will be
reduced from more than 11 percent in recent
years to 9 percent in 2001 and around 6 percent
by 2010. The ratio of the total NPV of debt to
exports is reduced from about 206 percent today to under 130
percent in 2010 and about 120 percent
over 2010 to 2020.
The assistance committed by the IMF of
US$2.3 million in NPV terms will be delivered over
a 9-year period. The debt relief provided by IDA of
US$22.5 million will be spread over a period of 12
years, covering 50 percent of The Gambia's
debt-service obligations to IDA. IDA and the IMF will
begin providing assistance at the decision point.
The Gambia will receive the bulk
of the assistance under the enhanced HIPC Initiative when
it satisfies a number of conditions, including adoption
and implementation of a participatory poverty reduction
strategy paper (see Annex).
Annex
1. The Gambia
Track record and poverty
The Gambia has made substantial
progress in implementing economic reforms. During the past
3 years, inflation remained low at about 2.0
percent, and the overall fiscal deficit (excluding
grants) was reduced to 4¼ percent of GDP
from 7.8 percent in 1997. The Gambia has
also made a strong effort in implementing structural
reforms in recent years, including in the area of external
trade liberalization. However, The Gambia still remains
one of the poorest countries in the world, with many
social indicators similar to the average for Sub-Saharan
Africa.
Reform steps to be taken before the completion point
The Gambia will reach its completion
point under the Initiative and receive the remainder of
its debt relief from all creditors once it has achieved a
number of actions designed to strengthen economic growth
and reduce poverty. The government of The Gambia expects
to complete the full Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper
(PRSP) by end-2001.
 | Continued commitment of The
Gambia to the financial and economic program
supported by the IMF's Poverty Reduction and Growth
Facility (PRGF) and IDA's structural adjustment loans.
 | Completion and satisfactory
implementation for one year of a fully participatory
PRSP . For this purpose, the government initiated a
broad-based participatory process, including civic
society to review the strategy for poverty alleviation,
adopted in 1994, and in the process prepare a Poverty
Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP), expected to be
finalized at end-2001. The government's objectives
were published in the interim PRSP in November 2000.
 | Implementation of an agreed set of
measures in the context of the government's poverty
reduction strategy, including the triggers described
in Box 7 of the HIPC Decision Point document.
 | Confirmation of the participation of
other creditors in the debt relief operation. |
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General
The HIPC Initiative was launched
by the World Bank and the IMF in 1996 as the first
comprehensive effort to eliminate unsustainable debt in
the world's poorest, most heavily indebted countries. In
October 1999, the international community agreed to make
the Initiative broader, deeper and faster by increasing
the number of eligible countries, raising the amount of
debt relief each eligible country will receive, and
speeding up its delivery. The enhanced Initiative aims at
reducing the NPV of debt at the decision point to a
maximum of 150 percent of exports and 250 percent of
government revenue, and will be provided on top of
traditional debt relief mechanisms (Paris Club debt
rescheduling on Naples terms, involving 67 percent debt
reduction in NPV terms and at least comparable action by
other bilateral creditors).
Eligible countries will qualify for debt
relief in two stages. In the first stage, the debtor
country will need to demonstrate the capacity to use
prudently the assistance granted by establishing a
satisfactory track record, normally of three years, under
IMF- and IDA-supported programs. In the second stage,
after reaching the decision point under the Initiative,
the country will implement a full-fledged poverty
reduction strategy, which has been prepared with broad
participation of civil society, and an agreed set of
measures aimed at enhancing economic growth. During this
stage, the IMF and IDA grant interim relief, provided that
the country stays on track with its IMF- and IDA-supported
program. In addition, Paris Club creditors, and possibly
others, are expected to grant debt relief on highly
concessional terms. At the end of the second stage, when
the floating completion point has been reached, the IMF
and IDA will provide the remainder of the committed debt
relief, while Paris Club creditors will enter into a
highly concessional stock-of-debt operation with the
country involved. Other multilateral and bilateral
creditors will need to contribute to the debt relief on
comparable terms.
Some three-dozen HIPCs are expected to
qualify for assistance under the enhanced HIPC Initiative,
the great majority of which are sub-Saharan African
countries. Fourteen countries have now reached their
decision point under the enhanced framework (The Gambia
joins Benin, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Guyana,
Honduras, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Senegal, Tanzania,
Uganda and Zambia), with total committed assistance
estimated at more than US$23 billion, representing an
average NPV stock-of-debt reduction of nearly 45 percent
on top of traditional debt relief mechanisms. Work is
underway to have debt relief packages in place for more
than 20 countries by the end of the year.
1The NPV of debt is the
discounted sum of all future debt-service obligations (interest
and principal) on existing debt. The NPV of debt is a
measure that takes into account the degree of
concessionality. It is defined as the sum of all future
debt-service obligations (interest and principal) on
existing debt, discounted, under the HIPC Initiative, at
the market interest rate. Whenever the interest rate on a
loan is lower than the market rate, the resulting NPV of
debt is smaller than its face value, with the difference
reflecting the grant element.
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