January 18, 2025
Addis Insight
IMF Completes Second ECF Review for Ethiopia, Approves US$248 Million Disbursement
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) Executive Board has completed the second review under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) arrangement for Ethiopia, enabling the immediate disbursement of approximately US$248 million (SDR 191.7 million). This brings total disbursements under the program to about US$1.611 billion since its approval in July 2024.
The four-year ECF arrangement supports Ethiopia’s Homegrown Economic Reform Agenda (HGER) aimed at addressing macroeconomic imbalances and fostering private sector–led growth. At the time of approval, the total arrangement stood at SDR 2.556 billion (850 percent of quota), or roughly US$3.4 billion, within a broader US$10.7 billion support package from various development partners and creditors.
In its review, the IMF noted that all quantitative performance criteria were met. However, the government’s contribution to targeted social safety nets fell short of the intended target, largely due to preparatory work needed to expand these programs. Additionally, the structural benchmark regarding audited accounts of the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) has been reset from end-January 2025 to end-March 2025 to allow for completion.
Progress on Key Reforms
Foreign Exchange Market: The authorities have implemented significant policy actions to enhance market efficiency and narrow the parallel market premium to single digits. Restricting the NBE’s foreign exchange interventions and moving toward a more flexible exchange rate regime are helping improve transparency and stability.
Monetary Policy: Tight monetary and financial conditions have been maintained to tackle inflationary pressures and reduce macroeconomic imbalances. Reaching a positive real interest rate is a key goal to anchor inflation expectations and support credibility in the new monetary policy framework.
Fiscal Policy: A supplementary budget approved in late November 2024 remains consistent with program targets. Ongoing efforts to expand the Productive Safety Net Program (PSNP) will protect vulnerable households, while measures like fuel price adjustments and VAT/excise tax reforms aim to bolster domestic revenue, thereby creating room for social and development spending.
Financial Sector Stability: Modernizing bank regulations, strengthening supervision, and closely monitoring non-performing loans are central to safeguarding financial stability. The authorities plan to remove the credit growth cap and adjust policy rates in a carefully sequenced manner to maintain orderly market conditions.
Debt Sustainability: Ethiopia is pursuing a debt treatment under the G20 Common Framework, and negotiations have progressed with the Official Creditor Committee. Additional discussions with Eurobond holders and other external commercial creditors are underway to secure comparability of treatment. The IMF welcomes these efforts as critical steps toward restoring debt sustainability.
IMF Statement
Following the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Nigel Clarke, Deputy Managing Director and Acting Chair of the Board, underscored Ethiopia’s robust reform momentum and commitment:
“The authorities continue to make strong progress in implementing their Fund-supported program and addressing macroeconomic imbalances. The transition to a flexible exchange rate has advanced further, supported by macroeconomic and foreign exchange market policy measures, and the parallel market premium has stabilized in single digits with rising FX supply.”
Mr. Clarke emphasized maintaining prudent macroeconomic policies, such as tight monetary policy and avoiding monetary financing of government deficits, to sustain stability. He also highlighted the importance of broadening social safety nets, advancing revenue mobilization efforts, and making further progress on debt restructuring to secure a firm foundation for Ethiopia’s economic future.
With the second review successfully completed, the IMF and Ethiopian authorities are focused on the continued implementation of the Homegrown Economic Reform Agenda. Key next steps include advancing debt restructuring discussions, solidifying monetary policy credibility, and ensuring broader social support for vulnerable communities.
No comments yet. Be the first to leave a comment!
A Nation Off the Same Page
August 16, 2025
In Ethiopia, Cancer Claims Thousands—and Most Go Untreated
August 09, 2025
In Ethiopia’s Oral Culture, Misinformation Finds a Digital Megaphone
August 02, 2025
After the storm: An old virus, new Frontline
July 26, 2025
Broken Reins
July 19, 2025
Carrying It All: Ethiopia’s Silent Generation of Single Mothers
July 12, 2025
Silenced by Techno-patriarchy
February 28, 2025
From Catcalling to Femicide: The Violence We’ve Learned to Survive
December 09, 2024
Ethiopia’s Fashion Stars Shine in Creative DNA: Ethiopia 2.0
December 03, 2024
Navigating Dubai’s Real Estate Market: Insights from Ethiopian Property Consultant Samrawit A. Kassaye
October 18, 2024
Unlocking Ethiopia’s Gemstone Potential: Haimanot Sisay’s Journey as the First Gemstone School Founder
September 25, 2024
August 19, 2025
Four Hotels, Including Hilton, Record 564 Million Birr Profit
August 19, 2025
Ethiopia Holds VAT at 15% in Landmark Overhaul to Reverse Fiscal Decline
August 18, 2025
Ethiopia to Raise Civil Servant Salaries by Up to 80% Starting September
August 16, 2025
CBE Disburses Over $1 Billion in Foreign Exchange to Ease Dollar Shortage
August 15, 2025
ZamZam Bank Appoints Eskinder Architects to Design Landmark New Headquarters
August 15, 2025
Immigration and Citizenship Service Reports Over 34 Billion Birr in Annual Revenue
August 15, 2025
Ethiopia Bans Sinotruk Vehicles Over Persistent Quality Defects
August 15, 2025
Ethiopia’s Tax Revenues Sink to 7.5% of GDP, Leaving Billions on the Table
© Copyright 2025 Addis News. All rights reserved.