‘Nigeria got $6.8b from IMF in two years’

The International Monetary Fund (IMF)  has assisted Nigeria with a total of $6.8 billion in emergency support to cushion the effect of the Corona virus pandemic in 2020 and 2021, IMF Country Representative in Nigeria,  Ari Aisen, has said.

Aisen, who spoke at the American Business Council Economic Update where experts explored opportunities and imperatives for businesses in Nigeria. said, “because of the pandemic, IMF has extended emergency assistance of $3.4 billion dollars in 2020. In 2021 also, because of the pandemic there was an Special Drawing Right (SDR) allocation of $3.4 billion. It is an additional resource to boost international reserves of the country, so in two years, $6.8 billion was deployed in emergency support for Nigeria.

“That was very helpful together with the policies to contain the negative impact of these huge shock; which was the pandemic, on the Nigerian economy, on the availability of imported goods, on salaries of public servants and on health package that the Ministry of Finance was able to put in place in 2020 when the pandemic hit.

“In addition to financing, Ari said the IMF has done more in terms of capacity development, he said, saying “beyond financing, we also leave quite a bit of capacity development to public servants in various areas;

In public financial management, including national account, price inflation statistics, bank supervision, payment system and some various areas of capacity development we do to support our members and Nigeria gets a lot of business assistance because it’s an important member country of IMF.

He said the  IMF also conduct articles for consultation, these are annual consultation visits to the country to discuss economic policies and have candid exchanges between expert economists from the IMF and expert Nigerian economists of the central bank, ministry of finance and all agencies to interact and discuss economic policies.”

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