South Africa will start repaying its IMF loan from 2023

 ·28 Jul 2020

South Africa’s $4.3 billion (R70.6 billion) emergency facility from the International Monetary Fund will be paid over on Wednesday and the country will only start repaying the loan in 2023.

The foreign-currency loan to assist in fighting the coronavirus pandemic was approved Monday and will be disbursed as a lump sum into the government’s account at the central bank on Wednesday, Montfort Mlachila, the Washington-based lender’s senior resident representative in South Africa, said in an interview.

The South African Reserve Bank is the fiscal agent for the government in dealings with the IMF. The facility is the country’s maximum entitlement under its special drawing rights with the IMF.

  • It is payable over 3.25 to five years at 1.1% interest;
  • It has to be repaid in eight equal instalments;
  • The first instalment is due at the end of 2023.

The money comes after some senior officials in the ruling African National Congress and its alliance partners initially rejected suggestions that the government seek help from multilateral lenders, saying the conditions of structural adjustments attached to such loans would undermine the nation’s sovereignty.

However, the IMF said emergency loans that are aimed at the virus and health interventions come without the normal conditions that have concerned past borrowers.

“The government is entirely free to use it as it sees fit,” Mlachila said.

“Obviously, we would like the government to use it for appropriate purposes, including in the direct fight against Covid-19 in terms of the health interventions as well as other economic measures to reduce the impact of Covid-19 on people’s livelihoods and to preserve jobs.”

Corruption crackdown

The loan comes days after President Cyril Ramaphosa said the government will crackdown on corruption linked to its coronavirus response and ordered a probe into the misuse of public funds.

Nine government agencies, including the National Prosecuting Authority, police and national tax agency, are investigating allegations of wrongdoing.

With more than 450,000 confirmed Covid-19 cases and 7,067 fatalities, South Africa is the worst-hit country on the continent. A lockdown aimed at curbing the spread is devastating the economy, with the government expecting it to contract 7.2% this year.

“South Africa does not have outstanding credit from the IMF and its capacity to repay” the loan is adequate, the government said in its letter of intent to the lender.

External and public debt sustainability indicators will not change significantly as a result of the loan “and we will take any necessary measures to maintain debt sustainability,” according to the letter that was co-signed by Finance Minister Tito Mboweni and central bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago.

An increase in virus-related spending, including on a R500 billion ($30.2 billion) stimulus package, is set to add pressure to an already strained fiscus.

Government debt is projected to peak at close to 90% of GDP in 2023-2024 and the budget deficit will swell to a record this year.

And that excludes potential support for the loss-making state-owned airline that is in a local form of bankruptcy protection.

All countries receiving emergency assistance from the IMF have agreed to transparently report spending, the lender said in a letter to the opposition Democratic Alliance.


Read: IMF approves R70 billion loan to South Africa

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