IMF OKs latest $100 mln loan tranche for Ivory Coast

01 Dec, 2012

 

The latest tranche of the IMF loan is part of a three-year, $616 million, zero-interest loan package approved last year to help the West African country recover from a decade of crisis and civil war.

 

President Alassane Ouattara named the new government on Nov. 22 after dissolving the former government a week earlier over a lack of cabinet solidarity.

 

Ivory Coast gets each disbursement once the IMF decides the country is on track with the loan's conditions, including reform of the cocoa sector and performance measures for the economy.

 

In October, the IMF raised its 2012 economic growth forecast for Ivory Coast to 8.6 percent, and said the country was also on track for strong growth next year.

 

"The authorities' ambitious investment plan for 2013 should stimulate and enhance private investment, and maintain economic expansion," IMF deputy managing director Naoyuki Shinohara said on Friday after the board's discussion.

 

"However, the magnitude and pace at which private sector engagement will materialize are critical, and would determine growth prospects."

 

The IMF said Ivory Coast has delayed some reforms in the energy sector and public banks, though the government is trying to restart them.

 

Once the star performer for French-speaking West Africa, Ivory Coast was hit by years of stagnation since a failed 2002 coup split the country and a brief post-election war killed thousands last year.

 

But Ivory Coast is showing signs of revival with the end of the war, and the economy performed better than expected in the first half of the year, the IMF said after its October visit.

 

Copyright Reuters, 2012

 

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