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IMF approves $1bn loan to finance Uganda's Covid-19 response

IMF logo

In this file photo taken on April 15, 2020, the seal of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington, DC.

Photo credit: Saul Loeb | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The institution said the approval enables the immediate disbursement of about $258 million to start on the response and help sustain a post-crisis inclusive recovery.

Kampala,

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has approved a one-billion-US dollar loan to finance Uganda's response to the Covid-19 crisis over the next three years.

The international financing institution in a statement posted on its website late on Monday said the pandemic has caused economic and social strife in the East African country leading to a reversal of anti-poverty gains, deterioration of fiscal balances, and put pressure on external buffers.

The institution said the approval enables the immediate disbursement of about $258 million to start on the response and help sustain a post-crisis inclusive recovery.

"Reforms will focus on creating fiscal space for priority social spending, preserving debt sustainability, strengthening governance, and enhancing the monetary and financial sector framework," the statement said.

IMF said some sectors of the economy are experiencing mild recovery, with economic growth in the financial year 2021/22, which starts on July 1, expected to reach 4.3 percent before returning to pre-pandemic rates of 6-7 percent in the medium term.

"The outlook remains highly uncertain, with risks tilted to the downside, including from a resurgence of tighter containment measures linked to higher Covid-19 positivity rates," the statement said.

The country is currently under a partial lockdown that was instituted to contain the rapid spread of the pandemic. Economic experts warn that stringent containment measures are likely to negatively impact economic recovery efforts.

The new IMF financing comes over a year after the institution through an emergency fund loaned Uganda 491.5 million dollars to help contain the effects of the pandemic.