logo
Nigeria has repaid R61bn Covid-19 funding, says IMF

Nigeria has repaid R61bn Covid-19 funding, says IMF

TimesLIVE09-05-2025

Nigeria has repaid $3.4bn (R61.82bn) in emergency funding it received from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help the country cope with the impact of the coronavirus pandemic five years ago, the global lender said on Thursday.
In April 2020 the IMF provided the financing to help Africa's largest oil exporter cope with a collapse in crude prices, which hit its finances and tipped the economy into recession.
IMF resident representative to Nigeria Christian Ebeke said in a statement that, as of April 30, the country had "fully repaid the financial support" it received under the Fund's Rapid Financing Instrument, a facility that provides urgent balance of payments funding to member nations.
"Nigeria is expected to honour some additional payments in the form of Special Drawing Rights charges of about $30m [R545.4m] annually," Ebeke added.
The most recent data from the Debt Management Office shows that Nigeria last year spent $4.66bn (R84.72bn) to service its foreign debt, of which $1.63bn (R29.64bn) was to the IMF.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Egypt's net foreign assets retreat in April after March jump
Egypt's net foreign assets retreat in April after March jump

TimesLIVE

time5 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Egypt's net foreign assets retreat in April after March jump

Egypt's net foreign assets (NFAs) fell by $1.5bn (R26.71bn) in April, central bank data showed on Wednesday, retreating from March, when the approval of the fourth review of the country's International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme sparked a jump. NFAs slid to the equivalent of $13.54bn (R241.08bn), from $15.08bn (R268.50bn) at the end of March, according to Reuters calculations based on official central bank currency exchange rates. In March NFAs jumped by $4.9bn (R87.25bn) after the IMF approved the disbursement to Egypt of $1.2bn (R21.37bn) after completing its review of the country's $8bn (R142.44bn )economic reform programme. The IMF also approved a request for a $1.3bn (R23.15bn) arrangement under the IMF's resilience and sustainability facility. The approvals led to an inflow of foreign investment in Egyptian pound treasury bills, bankers said. Egypt had been using foreign assets, which include assets held by both the central bank and commercial banks, to help prop up its currency since as long ago as September 2021. Net foreign assets turned negative in February 2022 and only returned to positive territory in May last year. Foreign assets increased in April at both the central bank and commercial banks, while foreign liabilities fell at both as well.

Chad seeks $30bn investment for development plan
Chad seeks $30bn investment for development plan

TimesLIVE

time8 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Chad seeks $30bn investment for development plan

Chad's national development plan seeks $30bn (R533.54bn) in public and private investment as it pursues growth in areas including digitalisation and infrastructure, the Central African country's finance minister Tahir Hamid Nguilin said on Tuesday. The plan called "Chad Connection 2030" is backed by the International Monetary Fund, which last month reached an agreement with the country for a four-year financial support programme worth about $630m (R11.20bn), and by the World Bank. It will be launched in September in Abu Dhabi, and aims to conclude deals with investors in sectors including roads, electricity and the digital economy. This is expected to generate average annual economic growth of 8% over the 2025-2030 period, Nguilin told journalists. Over the same period, the country's debt level will remain at 32% of gross domestic product, or around $2bn (R35.57bn), he said. Nguilin said the investment would help Chad to lift its citizens out of poverty, reduce its maternal mortality rate by 50% and double agricultural production. He added that the government plans to grant exploration permits to private companies operating in the oil and mining sectors, which should increase production. "Roughly speaking, we were favouring private rather than public investment, so that by the end of 2030, the share of the mining sector, excluding oil, could be at least 5% of GDP," Nguilin said, adding the current share, including artisanal mining, represented 1%-2%.

Spaza shop fund under fire: Questions over R500m initiative
Spaza shop fund under fire: Questions over R500m initiative

IOL News

timea day ago

  • IOL News

Spaza shop fund under fire: Questions over R500m initiative

The R500m Fund, launched to bolster South African-owned spaza shops in townships and rural areas with stock, infrastructure upgrades, and training, has come under intense scrutiny. Image: Itumeleng English/Independent Newspapers A VIRTUAL briefing by the Department of Small Business Development (DSBD) on the progress of the R500 million Spaza Shop Support Fund descended into chaos last week, with MPs from across the political spectrum lambasting officials for 'lacklustre' responses, unresolved corruption risks, and a controversial 'middlemen' supply model that critics warned could hijack the initiative. The Fund, launched to bolster South African-owned spaza shops in townships and rural areas with stock, infrastructure upgrades, and training, was under intense scrutiny. Only 3 000 to 5 000 applications have been received — a fraction of the estimated 200 000 spaza shops nationwide — raising concerns about exclusion, bureaucratic hurdles, and whether foreign-owned shops were being sidelined. The most explosive revelations centred around the Fund's reliance on three unnamed Delivery Channel Partners (DCPs), private wholesalers tasked with supplying spaza shops. Opposition MPs accused the state of creating a 'monopoly' for connected insiders. 'Why are these DCPs not listed in the presentation? Who are they? What are their markups? This is a middlemen scheme!' charged the DA's Nico Pienaar, demanding the Gazette records detailing their selection. FF+'s Henk van den Berg echoed concerns: 'Do spaza shops have to buy from these DCPs? Who pays them, the Fund or the shop owners?' DSBD Deputy Director-General Qinisile Delwa sidestepped specifics, stating only that DCPs were 'vital intermediaries'. Lwandiso Makupula from the Small Enterprise Development and Finance Agency (Sefda) later admitted that 58% of spaza shops are Somali-owned and 25% Ethiopian-owned, leaving just 8% eligible for the Fund. But MPs were unmoved. 'This is a recipe for fronting. Cartels will use locals as fronts to access funds,' warned the ANC's Peter Mabilo. Pienaar slammed the Fund's 'reckless' exemption of spaza shops from immediate Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC) and tax registration, calling it a 'free pass for abuse'. 'We're bleeding taxpayers, yet here's a state fund allowing six months' grace before registration. This is anti-formalisation and anti-growth,' he said. DSBD offered no justification, deepening suspicions of lax oversight. With Gauteng dominating applications, rural provinces risk being left behind. 'Your roadshows are failing. Rural spaza shops are lifelines, why aren't they prioritised?' asked chairperson Sonja Boshoff (DA). The ANC's Moses Modise blasted the DSBD's 'pathetic' outreach: 'Where are the community radio ads? The local newspaper campaigns?' Municipal licensing emerged as another crisis point. Many townships lacked digital systems, leaving spaza shops in limbo. 'Some municipalities don't even have licensing capacity. Is DSBD engaging the South African Local Government Association (Salga)?' Boshoff pressed. Delwa conceded that only the Northern Cape was piloting e-licensing, while KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape lead. Despite Makupula's assurance that 'misused grants convert to loans', MPs remained sceptical. 'Where are the anti-corruption measures? Who monitors officials?' Boshoff asked. The MK Party's Sarah Mokoena highlighted registration chaos: 'The online system crashes constantly. Shop owners think they're registered when they're not.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store