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IMF Completes First Review of Bangladesh's PRGF
Arrangement and Approves US$74 Million Disbursement
Press Release No. 04/3
IMF (Date: January 9, 2004)
The Executive Board
of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today completed the first
review of Bangladesh's economic performance under its three-year SDR 347
million (about US$517 million) Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF)
arrangement, which was approved on June 20, 2003 (see
Press Release No. 03/92). This decision entitles Bangladesh to the
release of a further SDR 49.5 million (about US$74 million) under the
arrangement.
The Executive Board
also approved Bangladesh's request for a waiver on the nonobservance of
structural performance criteria in tax administration and in phasing out
the margin requirements on imports. The initial slippage in tax
administration has now been redressed, and the delay with respect to the
margin requirements was negligible.
The Poverty Reduction
and Growth Facility is the IMF's concessional facility for low-income
countries. PRGF-supported programs are based on country-owned poverty
reduction strategies adopted in a participatory process involving civil
society and development partners, and articulated in a Poverty Reduction
Strategy Paper (PRSP). This is intended to ensure that each PRGF-supported
program is consistent with a comprehensive framework for macroeconomic,
structural, and social policies, to foster growth and reduce poverty.
PRGF loans carry an annual interest rate of 0.5 percent, and are
repayable over 10 years with a 5 ½-year grace period on principal
payments.
Following the
Executive Board's discussion of Bangladesh, Shigemitsu Sugisaki, Deputy
Managing Director and Acting Chairman, said:
"Bangladesh's
economic performance has strengthened in the first year of
implementation of the government's PRGF-supported economic program.
Economic growth has picked up, inflation is in check, and the external
position has improved more than expected. The program is on
track. The key
macroeconomic targets have been achieved to date, and reforms in tax
administration and in the nationalized commercial banks are moving ahead
after modest initial delays.
"The challenges ahead
for Bangladesh are to turn this initial progress into faster and lasting
growth with poverty reduction, and to prepare for the potential impact
of the phase out of Multifiber Agreement quotas by end-2004. The
authorities intend to meet these challenges with determined policy
implementation, especially on the structural front, and a strong effort
to improve governance and the business climate. Critical policy measures
envisaged are reforms in tax administration and the nationalized
commercial banks, implementation of the recently adopted government
procurement guidelines, and the establishment of an Independent
Anti-Corruption Commission.
"The PRGF-supported
program for fiscal year 2004 provides for a cautious easing of the
stance of macroeconomic policies to better support growth, given the
relatively stable financial environment. Bangladesh Bank has taken
timely, market-based actions to lower interest rates, including a
reduction in the Statutory Liquidity Requirement. Furthermore, the
recent reduction in interest rates on National Savings Certificates
represents a key step toward making the interest rate structure more
flexible. It should help to put downward pressure on interest rates, and
also contain the cost of borrowing for financing the budget.
"The budget for
fiscal year 2004 targets increases in infrastructure and
social spending,
financed by external support on concessional terms. Realization of these
spending goals will require improvements in public expenditure
management and closer tracking and greater transparency of spending. On
the revenue front, strong efforts to improve tax administration will be
necessary to achieve the budgeted revenue target, in view of lagging
revenue performance so far this year. Over the medium term, more
fundamental reforms of tax administration, including modernizing the
National Board of Revenue, will help underpin the program's revenue
target.
"A deepening of
structural reforms is crucial to improve the prospects for investment
and to maintain fiscal sustainability. Particularly important will be
ongoing efforts to strengthen management of the four nationalized
commercial banks and to define bank-by-bank resolution strategies by
April 2004 as planned. Reform of the power sector and further progress
in downsizing the manufacturing SOEs also will be important for
improving growth prospects. Budget support to loss-making enterprises
needs to be curtailed, and further efforts made to divest them as soon
as feasible in order to achieve the authorities' medium-term targets in
this area.
"The authorities have
started work on the full Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP). The
PRSP is expected to incorporate a comprehensive assessment of the
poverty and social impact of reforms and to be prepared on the basis of
broad consultations with civil society," Mr. Sugisaki stated.
Source:
http://www.imf.org
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