Tag: IMF

  • IMF loan and my Cambridge vindication 

    IMF loan and my Cambridge vindication 

    The news that Nigeria under this administration has paid off all its IMF loan reminds me of questions thrown at me last year at The Cambridge University in the United Kingdom when I was interrogated on my book on the 2023 elections, Beating All Odds: How Bola Tinubu became President.

    Some had tackled me when I asserted the following words:

    “Some critics in the country who are on the left have said President Tinubu is beholden to the West and IMF policies. This is an interesting point.

     His policy of stanching the bleeding like floating the currency or letting fuel sell at the market rate seem to suggest this. But he has no choice. He is, to me, not implementing the policy under their behest. I see it as a coincidence of policy. This so-called Washington consensus has been touted as the solution to the problems of many developing countries with mixed results. Yet, if your currency is bleeding, do you borrow to save it without a productive base? No. If the price of fuel is killing your ability to build roads or hospitals or fund education, do you continue? I think not.

    Read Also: Tinubu reaffirms commitment to national unity at Vatican Mass

    “So, if it is IMF policy, it is not Tinubu obedience but a coincidence of necessity. When one of the candidates, Peter Obi was asked if he had an alternative to Tinubu’s policies, he said he would go and look for money to save the situation. In order words, he would hark back to the same era of extravagance and indulgence.”

     A PHD student was particular about the IMF taking over the economy. Even then, the government did not take any new loan from IMF.

    Today, it is clear that my point was vindicated. Professor Anthony Kila, who moderated the Cambridge event, as an intellectual understood the rigour of my argument, but he, too will be glad that he let me play the economic exponent. Some of those who argued that Tinubu was servile to IMF were economists without facts.

    Hence the late Henry Kissinger said during the 1982 recession in the U.S., “that the economy was too important to be left in the hands of economists.” President Tinubu demonstrated you do not need to be a slave to be right.

  • FULL LIST: Nigeria, others not indebted to IMF

    FULL LIST: Nigeria, others not indebted to IMF

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has removed Nigeria from its list of debtor-countries.

    Established in 1944, IMF supports countries’ economic growth by providing financial aid and guidance on policies to enhance stability, productivity, and job opportunities.

    Countries seek loans from the IMF to address economic crises, stabilise their currencies, implement structural reforms, and alleviate balance of payments difficulties.

    Nigeria has joined Switzerland, Singapore, China and New Zealand on the list of the countries not indebted to the IMF.

    The country cleared the $1.6 billion debt it owed the IMF.

    Read Also; Tinubu pledges commitment to promoting independence of judiciary

    In a report, titled: “Total IMF Credit Outstanding – Movement from May 01, 2025 to May 06, 2025,” obtained on the multilateral institution’s website on Wednesday, Nigeria was not listed among the debtors, which had 91 developing and least developed countries owing the fund a total of $117,797,656,224 as at May 6, 2025.

    Total IMF credit outstanding refers to the total amount of unpaid and outstanding principal due to the fund from its member countries. This includes both outstanding loans under current arrangements and those that have expired.

    StatiSense, a data company, also confirmed on its X handle that Nigeria was no longer listed on the list of countries indebted to IMF, revealed that as at July 28, 2023, Nigeria owed the fund $1.61 billion.

    StatiSense said the debt was reduced to $1.37 billion as at January 5, 2024; $933.03 million as at July 10, 2024; $472.06 million as at January 8, 2025, before it was finally settled this month.

    According to Tolu Ogunlesi, a media aide to former President Muhammadu Buhari: “Nigeria got US$3.4 billion in “emergency financial assistance” from the IMF, under the “Rapid Financing Instrument”: 

    According to Minister @ZShamsuna: 

    – Interest Rate: 1%

    – Repayment moratorium of 3.25 years

    – Repayment period of 5 years

    “This US$3.4 billion (equivalent to 2.454.5 billion SDR; amounting to 100% of our SDR quota) Covid-19 assistance from the IMF to @NigeriaGov, under the IMF’s Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI), has now been fully repaid, in line with the terms of the agreement.

    “A repayment period of 5 years, meaning 2020 to 2025, and a moratorium of 3.25 years, meaning that we had a grace period until Q3 2023 before we had to start repaying. 

    “So, repayment schedule: 2023-2025

    “PBAT has kept to the terms, and as of May 2025, the loan has been fully repaid. Naija no dey carry last, and we no dey default. 

    “This is what the repayment looks like, from the @IMFNews website:

    “Outstanding as at June 30, 2023: 2,454,500,000

    “Dec 31, 2023: 1,840,875,000

    “June 30, 2024: 1,227,250,000

    “March 31, 2025: 306,810,000

    “May 07, 2025: 0

    The top 10 countries most indebted to the IMF include:

    ·       Argentina     

    ·       Egypt 

    ·       Ukraine        

    ·       Pakistan       

    ·       Ecuador        

    ·       Colombia     

    ·       Angola          

    ·       Kenya

    ·       Ghana           

    ·       Ivory Coast  

    African indebted countries are as follows:

    ·       Tanzania

    ·       Cameroon

    ·       Chad

    ·       Comoros

    ·       Equatorial Guinea

    ·       Guinea

    ·       Ethiopia

    ·       Botswana

    ·       Democratic Republic of the Congo

  • Delta APC lauds Tinubu over Nigeria’s IMF debt repayment

    Delta APC lauds Tinubu over Nigeria’s IMF debt repayment

    The Delta APC has lauded President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for the full repayment of Nigeria’s debt to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), describing it as a landmark financial victory and a bold symbol of Nigeria’s renewed economic sovereignty.

    In a statement signed by its State Publicity Secretary, Valentine Onojeghuo, the party commended the Tinubu administration for what it termed “a strategic reset of Nigeria’s economic narrative,” affirming that the President has “restored the dignity of the Nigerian nation and positioned her as a re-emerging economic powerhouse.”

    Part of the statement reads, “The All Progressives Congress (APC), Delta State under the chairmanship of Elder Omeni Sobotie, proudly extends its warmest congratulations to His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR, on the remarkable economic milestones achieved under his visionary Renewed Hope Agenda.”

    It said the repayment of the IMF debt, which led to Nigeria’s removal from the list of indebted countries, was not just a financial transaction, but a “defining moment” in the Tinubu administration’s efforts to re-engineer the economy.

    “This singular accomplishment, under the firm and competent stewardship of President Tinubu, is not only a financial triumph but a powerful statement of Nigeria’s resurgence as a sovereign economic powerhouse,” the statement added.

    Read Also: Tinubu launches national action plan on violence against children

    It further emphasized the ripple effect of the President’s bold economic actions, stating: “These decisive fiscal disciplines, bold monetary policies and sweeping diversification efforts have sparked unprecedented economic growth, reinvigorated our productive sectors and repositioned Nigeria as a destination of choice for global investment.”

    According to the party, these policies are “not abstract projections; they are felt daily in communities across our nation.”

    Delta APC also used the moment to stress that President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda has birthed “initiatives that support local enterprise, agricultural expansion, digital innovation, infrastructure renewal and youth empowerment,” adding that the economic transformation is both measurable and people-oriented.

  • IMF applauds Nigeria for exchange rate reforms, subsidy removal

    IMF applauds Nigeria for exchange rate reforms, subsidy removal

    • Tariff hike: Okonjo-Iweala says Africa’s trade with US limited

    • Ibrahim tasks IMF on economies of developing countries

    The International Monetary Funds (IMF) yesterday said Nigeria has acted wisely by instituting crucial reforms in exchange rate, and removing petrol subsidies that hurt government’s revenue deployment and funding for critical projects.

    Director of the African Department, at the IMF, Abebe Selassie, communicated the Fund’s position during the presentation of Regional Economic Outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa, at the ongoing IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington DC.

    He said: “The Fund said it has been really impressed by how much reforms have been undertaken in recent years, most notably trying to go to the heart of the cause of the macroeconomic imbalances in Nigeria. That, of course, is related to the fact that oil subsidies were picking up a very large share of the limited tax revenues that the government has tackled.”

    Meanwhile, the Director-General, World Trade Organisation (WTO), Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, said that Africa’s trade with the United States is very limited so the continent as a whole is not that impacted by tariff hike by the US.

    Speaking yesterday on the sidelines of the ongoing IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings in the US, she said that WTO has done the analysis.

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    “Sub- Saharan  Africa exports 6.5 per cent of Africa’s exports only go to the US, and 4.4 per cent of its imports come from the US. So, the impact for the continent as a whole is not that bad. However, it’s good news and bad news. Good news is that it’s limited. Bad news is, well, we’re not trading that much, which is not a good thing,” she said.

    She added: “But the problem is that within Africa, there are a handful of countries that are very severely impacted because they’ve got high reciprocal tariffs put on them, and these are poor countries.”

    Selassie disclosed that before the subsidy removal, government’s revenues were not necessarily being used in the most effective way to help the most vulnerable people.

    According to him, there were also the issues related to the imbalances in the external side with the exchange rate extremely out of line.

    Selassie applauded government’s expansion of social protection to help the most vulnerable.

    “This has all been very good to see, but more can be done, particularly on expanding social protection and also enhancing a lot more transparency in the oil sector so that the removal of subsidies does translate into flow of revenue into government budgets. So, there’s a little bit more work to do in these areas,” he said.

    He said many African economies have made significant progress in infrastructure funding, including building of roads, schools, and other key infrastructure.

    He, however, asked that the governments should effectively collect taxes to enable it bridge budget deficits and support more growth of the economy.

    In terms of the reforms, Selassie said the pressing thing is that “we have been really  impressed by how much reforms have been taken at the moment.”

    He said that government should look at how reforms’ savings have been spent, and ensure that such funds are committed to projects that help the poor and vulnerable in the society.

    He said: “Removal of petrol subsidy means more revenue for government. I advise that government diversifies the economy from oil, given what is happening to commodities prices at the global markets. I do not advocate for spending cuts, even as borrowed funds should be optimised for societal good”.

    Okonjo-Iweala added: “I’ll just use two as an example. One is Lesotho, that everybody is talking about, that has 50% reciprocal tariffs. It exports $200 million worth of textiles to the US, imports about $3 million worth of goods from the US. So very little. And if you look at that, if those tariffs are implemented on Lesotho, it will lose almost half a percentage point of its GDP growth, which is huge for a poor country”.

    She said the WTO has asked the US, to look at least developed countries, the poorest, and to try to waive these reciprocal tariffs to remove them, so that the poorest countries and Africa as a whole, that we don’t have these tariffs on us.

    She advised that Africa should do more within the continent, to rely on its own resources.

    She said: “So, when you need investment, you have to do so much more in terms of mobilizing domestic resources to put infrastructure in place, removing bureaucratic barriers so investment can come in”.

    “And this is what we need to do. And we need to trade more. We cannot trade more externally, where our trade is only three per cent of world trade, or internally, where intra Africa trade is 16 to 20 per cent at most. If we don’t add value to our products, we keep exporting the same things, you know, commodities that are not processed, we don’t create jobs. We must attract investment to change that, and then trade internally.”

    Ibrahim tasks IMF on economies of developing countries

    Chairman , Senate Inter parliamentary  Committee , Senator Jimoh Ibrahim has advised the International Monetary Fund( IMF) and the World Bank to elevate their responses beyond merely downgrading the economies of developing countries.

    Ibrahim told reporters on the sideline of  the spring 2025 meetings of the IMF and World Bank in  Washington DC, USA that cutting projected growth or rescheduling debts are insufficient and advised the two international financial institutions  to respond beyond merely downgrading outlooks.

    “They should do more to unite nations. International institutions should engage leaders. The world needs a conference table of leaders and genuine engagement, ” he said.

    He urged the IMF and World Bank leadership to always  hold ” high – level discussions with global economic leaders focused on collaboration.”

    The leadership, he further advised , should approach the meetings not as enforcers of policies but in a friendly and composed manner, while avoiding unwarranted comments.

    Ibrahim, who represents Ondo South Senatorial district under the platform of the All Progressives Congress ( APC) in the Senate warned that the global economy is facing an uncertain future or appropriately a financial state of stagnation.

     ” The situation threatens innovation and could lead to a worldwide retreat from commitments to globalisation, ” warning that if the trend continues, a recovery period of 10 or more years may ensue.

    The fallouts of this could be rise in poverty level, heightened tensions across the world. He urged world leaders to set aside personal differences and focus on economic collaboration instead of power struggles

    Speaking of the annual meetings, Ibrahim commended the IMF/World Bank group but advised the office of the IMF statistician to do more so that the world body can have accurate and very  reliable data to work with.

    Specifically on African economies, he said : ” I cannot see any improvement in economic outlooks as the IMF is working on projected data rather than reliable data. Their data , as it relates to Africa , is weak and unreliable, he said,

    Ibrahim praised President Bola Tinubu for taking bold decisions on the nation’s economy and urged him to stay focused.

    “My advice is that the President  stays committed to his reform agenda strive to  enhance his team’s knowledge capacity on economic management and international finance. “

  • Nigeria asks IMF, World Bank to back reforming economies

    Nigeria asks IMF, World Bank to back reforming economies

    The Federal Government has urged the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank to extend stronger financial backing to reform-minded economies, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa.

    The strong financial backing the federal government said should come in the form of innovative support instruments to reform-minded economies as they implement bold economic transformation agendas.

    Nigeria’s appeal was delivered by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, at the G-24 Ministerial meeting on the sidelines of the ongoing 2025 IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington D.C.

    Addressing global financial leaders and policy influencers, Edun made a case for rewarding economies undertaking difficult yet necessary reforms. He stated that beyond acknowledging reform efforts, it was imperative for the international financial community to expand access to affordable, sustainable financing tailored to support long-term economic transitions.

    The Finance Minister presented Nigeria’s statement in his dual capacity as a national representative and as First Vice-Chair of the G-24—a group of developing nations working to coordinate positions on monetary and development issues.

    He satted that under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s leadership, Nigeria is pursuing an ambitious reform agenda designed to restore macroeconomic stability, foster inclusive growth, and position the country for long-term prosperity. 

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    The measures, according to him, include the removal of fuel subsidies, the unification of foreign exchange windows, and an ongoing overhaul of the tax system to broaden the revenue base and improve fiscal efficiency.

    “These decisions are not easy,” he acknowledged. “But they are necessary for laying the foundation for a more resilient and inclusive economy that works for all Nigerians.”

    Edun commended the IMF’s recent creation of a third Sub-Saharan Africa Chair—a move widely viewed as an effort to enhance the region’s voice and participation within the institution. He called for this momentum to continue through expanded African representation in leadership and decision-making roles within the Bretton Woods institutions.

    “Nigeria is open for business,” he declared, reaffirming the country’s readiness to engage with development partners, investors, and multilateral institutions in advancing its economic transformation agenda.

    The G-24 Meeting serves as a key platform for finance ministers and central bank governors from developing countries to discuss collective challenges and policy solutions, particularly in light of a difficult global economic environment characterized by tight financial conditions, climate-related vulnerabilities, and geopolitical instability.

     Edun’s intervention signals Nigeria’s continued commitment to playing a leading role in shaping multilateral development discourse while aligning its domestic policies with global best practices for stability, growth, and sustainable development.

  • IMF cuts global growth forecast over Trump tariffs

    IMF cuts global growth forecast over Trump tariffs

    By Collins Nweze, Washington DC

    Following the plethora of tariffs and counter tariffs the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has reviewed downwards its growth forecast for world’s economy in 2025.

    Yesterday, it pegged Nigeria’s economic growth in 2025 at three per cent, lower than the 3.2 per cent it announced in the October 2024 outlook.

    It projected that global economic growth will dip to 2.8 per cent this year and three per cent in 2026.

    Both forecasts were released in the World Economic Outlook (WEO) report presented at the ongoing IMF/World Bank Spring meetings in Washington, DC.

    Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Olawale Edun, said he expected the IMF to continue providing support.

    He said: “Bretton Wood institutions stand ready to provide a safety net and development finance at this time of heightened global uncertainty.”

    According to the IMF, since the release of the January 2025 WEO update, a series of new tariff measures by the United States (US) and countermeasures by its trading partners have been announced and implemented.

    This, the fund noted, ended up in “near-universal” US tariffs on April 2, bringing effective tariff rates to levels not seen in a century.

    “This on its own is a major negative shock to growth,” the IMF report said.

    Chief Economist and Director of Research Department at the IMF, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, said the global economy is entering a new era as the global economic system that has operated for the last 80 years is being reset.

    According to him, the drop in oil prices is coming mostly from weaker global demand.

    Gourinchas said: “There’s been some increase in supply coming from OPEC plus countries, but broadly speaking, the decline is mostly coming from weaker demand.

    ”So, that is going to play out in ways we’d expect: the commodity exporters are going to face lower export revenues from the decline in oil prices.”

    He said this would weigh on their fiscal outlook and their growth.

    The IMF said the unpredictability with which the measures have been unfolding also hurts economic activity and the outlook, making it more difficult to make assumptions “that would constitute a basis for an internally consistent and timely set of projections”

     It stated: “This is complemented with a range of global growth forecasts, primarily under different trade policy assumptions.

    “The swift escalation of trade tensions and extremely high levels of policy uncertainty are expected to have a significant impact on global economic activity.

    “Under the reference forecast that incorporates information as of April 4, global growth is projected to drop to 2.8 per cent in 2025 and 3 per cent in 2026—down from 3.3 per cent for both years in the January 2025 WEO Update, corresponding to a cumulative downgrade of 0.8 percentage point, and much below the historical (2000–19) average of 3.7 per cent.”

    Read Also: IMF urges nations with huge debts to seek restructuring

    IMF cut its forecast for global growth by 0.5 percentage points to 2.8 per cent for 2025, and by 0.3 percentage points to three per cent from its January forecast that growth would reach 3.3 per cent in both years.

    The Fund projected inflation to decline more slowly than expected in January, given the impact of tariffs, reaching 4.3 per cent in 2025 and 3.6 per cent in 2026.

    The IMF said the swift escalation of trade tensions and “extremely high levels” of uncertainty about future policies would have a significant impact on global economic activity.

    According to Gourinchas, medium-term growth prospects remained mediocre, with the five-year forecast stuck at 3.2 per cent, below the historical average of 3.7 per cent from 2000-2019, with no relief in sight absent significant structural reforms.

    The IMF slashed its forecast for growth in global trade by 1.5 percentage points to 1.7 per cent, half the growth seen in 2024, reflecting the accelerating fragmentation of the global economy.

    Speaking during the release of the Financial Stability Report, Assistant Director, Monetary and Capital Markets Department, IMF, Jason Wu, asked Nigeria to be vigilant and ensure that the commodity prices drop does not negatively impact its revenue.

    He also commended the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and economic reforms’ impact on growth, exchange rate stability and dip in the inflation rate.

    “In the case of Nigeria, macroeconomics have held up, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth has been fairly consistent, and inflation has been coming down, and earlier this year, we have seen Nigerian sovereign credit spreads lowering.

    “I think the reforms that authorities have done, including the liberalisation of exchange rates, have helped in that regard,” he said.

    Wu noted that during a time when global financial markets are volatile and risk appetite is wavering, this is when increases in sovereign spreads that will challenge the external picture for Nigeria, as well as other frontier economies, will be seen.

    He said: “If trade tensions are going to lead to lower global demand for commodities, this will obviously weigh on the revenue that it will receive.

    “So, I think both of those developments would counsel that authorities remain quite vigilant to these developments and take appropriate policies to counter.”

    IMF Director of the Monetary and Capital Markets Department, Adrian Tobias, advised central banks to be independent, to promote financial sector stability.

    “Helping central banks in terms of governance and monetary policy frameworks is one of the core missions of the IMF.

    “We have seen time and time again that central bank interdependence is an important foundation for central banks to achieve their goals, which are primarily price stability and financial stability,” he said.

  • IMF cuts global growth forecast to 2.8% over tariff uncertainty

    IMF cuts global growth forecast to 2.8% over tariff uncertainty

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday lowered its global economic growth forecast for 2025 to 2.8 per cent.

    Predicting the wave of tariffs and uncertainty unleashed by U.S. President Donald Trump will lead to a worldwide economic slowdown.

    The IMF revised its projection of 3.3 per cent forecast in January.

    Global growth for 2026 was projected to drop to 3 per cent, also down from 3.3 per cent.

    IMF economic counsellor Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said the world economy was being severely tested following the new tariffs announced by Trump.

    The IMF noted that its April forecast was “put together under exceptional circumstances,

    “ Citing Trump’s announcement on April 2 that the U.S. was imposing blanket tariffs of 10 per cent on nearly all trading partners, plus additional levies for a host of countries.

    Read Also: IMF urges nations with huge debts to seek restructuring

    While the higher tariffs have been suspended for 90 days to allow for trade negotiations, the policy caused the IMF expert “to jettison our projections,” Gourinchas said.

    “While many of the scheduled tariff increases are on hold for now, the combination of measures and countermeasures has hiked U.S. and global tariff rates to centennial highs.”

    The global economy proved surprisingly resilient during the shocks of the last four years including a period of global high inflation linked to energy prices and “the war in Ukraine and still bears significant scars,” the IMF said.

    Now, inflation could rise again amid the trade tensions, while the uncertainty surrounding them was weighing on growth, it said.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • IMF urges nations with huge debts to seek restructuring

    IMF urges nations with huge debts to seek restructuring

    By Collins Nweze, Washington DC

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) yesterday advised heavily-indebted countries to seek debt restructuring where necessary to restore macroeconomic stability and sustainable growth.

    In a report titled: “Toward a Better Balanced and More Resilient World Economy” released ahead of the IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington D.C., IMF Managing Director, Kristalina Georgieva, said countries with unsustainable public debt need to move proactively to restore sustainability.

    According to her, where necessary, countries must take the difficult route of debt restructuring.

    She called on countries to take resolute fiscal action to rebuild policy space, setting out gradual adjustment paths that respect fiscal frameworks.

    Georgieva also outlined grave implications of trade tensions and tariff hikes to global economies, including putting many countries in tighter financial conditions.

    She cautioned that protracted high uncertainty raises the risk of financial market stress.

    The IMF chief explained that smaller advanced economies and most emerging markets rely more on trade for their growth, and are thus more exposed to tighter financial conditions.

     She said that low-income countries face the additional challenge of collapsing aid flows as donor countries pivot to dealing with domestic concerns.

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     Georgieva therefore, called on emerging market economies to preserve exchange rate flexibility as a shock absorber.

    According to her, to protect price stability, monetary policy must remain agile and credible, supported by a strong commitment to central bank independence.

    She said central bankers must keep an eagle eye on the data, including higher inflation expectations in some cases, noting that in finance, strong regulation and supervision remain essential to keep banks safe while rising risks from non-banks must be monitored and contained.

    She said: “Policymakers can look to the IMF’s Integrated Policy Framework for insights on how and when temporary measures may be warranted. Tighter budget constraints will entail difficult choices everywhere—but nowhere more so than in low-income countries. Here, weak revenues necessitate stronger efforts for domestic resource mobilization, but also call for support from international partners—both to improve capacity for reforms and to secure crucial financial assistance”.

    Explaining the impacts of these tensions, she said that uncertainty is costly.

    Georgieva said: “The complexity of modern supply chains means imported inputs feed into a broad range of domestic products. The cost of one item can be affected by tariffs in dozens of countries. In a world of bilateral tariff rates, each of which may be moving up or down, planning becomes difficult. “The result? Ships at sea not knowing which port to sail to; investment decisions postponed; financial markets volatile; precautionary savings up. The longer uncertainty persists, the larger the cost.”

     According to her, rising trade barriers hit growth upfront. She said that tariffs, like all taxes, raise revenue at the expense of reducing and shifting activity—and evidence from past episodes suggests higher tariff rates are not paid by trading partners alone. Importers pay some part through lower profits, and consumers pay some part through higher prices.

    She added:  “By raising the cost of imported inputs, tariffs act upfront. Of course, if domestic markets are large, they also create incentives for foreign firms to respond with inward investment, bringing in new activity and new jobs. This, however, takes time.”

     Georgieva said protectionism erodes productivity over the long run, especially in smaller economies.

     According to her, shielding industries from competition reduces incentives for efficient resource allocation.

     Georgieva said: “Past productivity and competitiveness gains from trade erode. Entrepreneurship gives way to special pleadings for exemptions, protection, and state support. This hurts innovation. But again, if domestic markets are large and domestic competition is vibrant, negative effects can be mitigated.”

    She noted that that ultimately, trade is like water given that when countries put up obstacles in the form of tariff and nontariff barriers, the flow diverts.

     The IMF chief said that some sectors in some countries may be flooded by cheap imports; others may see shortages adding that trade will always go on, but disruptions incur costs.

     As trade tensions flared, global stock prices dropped, meaning that  the world is currently in a phase of sudden and sweeping shifts.

     “Trade tensions are like a pot that was bubbling for a long time and is now boiling over. To a large extent, what we see is the result of an erosion of trust—trust in the international system, and trust between countries,” Georgieva said.

     She said that global economic integration has lifted vast numbers of people out of poverty and made the world as a whole better off, but not everyone benefitted.

    Georgieva said: “Communities were hollowed out by jobs going overseas. Wages were repressed by the growing availability of low-cost labor. Prices went up when global supply chains were interrupted. Many blame the international economic system for the perceived unfairness in their lives.”

    “Trade distortions—tariff and nontariff barriers—have fed negative perceptions of a multilateral system seen to have failed to deliver a level playing field.”

    She said the feeling of unfairness in some places feeds the narrative that while some countries  play by the rules, others game the system without penalty.

  • IMF recommends tight monetary policy to lower Nigeria’s inflation

    IMF recommends tight monetary policy to lower Nigeria’s inflation

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) says a tight monetary policy stance is required to firmly guide inflation down in Nigeria.

    IMF’s Mission Chief for Nigeria, Axel Schimmelpfennig,  said this in a statement yesterday  following his visit to hold discussions for the 2025 Article IV Consultations with Nigeria.

    Schimmelpfennig led an IMF team to Lagos and Abuja from April 2 to 15.

    His statement reads:“The Nigerian authorities have taken important steps to stabilise the economy, enhance resilience, and support growth.

    “The financing of the fiscal deficit by the central bank has ceased, costly fuel subsidies were removed, and the functioning of the foreign exchange market has improved.

    “Gains have yet to benefit all Nigerians as poverty and food insecurity remain high.

    “The outlook is marked by significant uncertainty. Elevated global risk sentiment and lower oil prices impact the Nigerian economy.”

    He said the reforms since 2023 had put the Nigerian economy in a better position to navigate the external environment.

    Schimmelpfennig said looking ahead, macroeconomic policies needed to further strengthen buffers and resilience while creating enabling conditions for private sector-led growth.

    He said the Nigerian authorities communicated to the mission that they would implement the 2025 budget in a manner that was responsive to the decline in international oil prices.

    Schimmelpfennig said a neutral fiscal stance would support monetary policy to bring down inflation.

    “To safeguard key spending priorities, it is imperative that fiscal savings from the fuel subsidy removal are channelled to the budget.

    Read Also: IMF raises concerns over exposure to domestic bonds

    “In particular, adjustments should protect critical, growth-enhancing investment, while accelerating and broadening the delivery of cash transfers under the World Bank-supported programme to provide relief to those experiencing food insecurity.

    “A tight monetary policy stance is required to firmly guide inflation down.”

    He said the Monetary Policy Committee’s data-dependent approach had served Nigeria well and would help navigate elevated macroeconomic uncertainty.

    “Announcing a disinflation path to serve as an intermediate target can help anchor inflation expectations.”

  • IMF raises concerns over exposure to domestic bonds

    IMF raises concerns over exposure to domestic bonds

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has raised serious concerns over banks’ rising exposure to domestic bond markets.

    In a report: “Fiscal Determinants of Domestic Sovereign Bond Yields in Emerging Market and Developing Economies”, the Fund said domestic sovereign bonds have become a growing source of government financing in Emerging Market and Developing Economies (EMDEs), with banks playing key roles in the investments.

    The Fund disclosed that commercial banks’ exposure to their government debt has continued to increase since the global financial crisis and accelerated after the COVID-19, strengthening sovereign-bank nexus.

    The Fund, however, warned that an increase in domestic banks’ holdings of domestic sovereign debt after the global financial crisis in advanced and emerging market economies could raise the cost of borrowing depending on the level of debt and market sentiment.

    The Fund said that over the past two decades, emerging market and development economies have increasingly turned to domestic sources of financing.

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     “This trend reflects the significant development of local debt markets, which provide a viable alternative to external financing and mitigate exposure to currency risk. At the same time, there has been a notable shift in the creditor composition of domestic debt, with a concentration of government debt held by domestic banks, thereby intensifying the sovereign-bank nexus,” the Fund said.

    According to the IMF, the COVID-19 pandemic further accentuated these trends, as many EMDEs encountered substantial financing needs that were met through a marked increase in domestic debt issuances, offering a breathing space during a period characterised by tight external financing conditions.

     “These issuances were predominantly absorbed by domestic banks and foreign investors. Moving forward, as domestic debt markets continue to expand, it becomes critical to comprehend the determinants of domestic borrowing costs as well as any emerging risks,” it added.

    The IMF specifically, highlighted the interaction of fiscal policy with banking sector leverage and foreign investor holdings for government debt.

    It said: “The greater the reliance on domestic banks for deficit financing, the stronger the impact of loose fiscal policy on domestic bond yields. The shift in domestic debt financing towards domestic banks after the pandemic implies that sovereign yields have been increasingly interlinked with domestic banks’ investment behavior implying potential financial sector risks in major EMDEs”.

    The Fund disclosed that bond yields in EMDEs are becoming increasingly sensitive to fiscal fundamentals, reflecting increased domestic banks’ exposure to public debt as well as gradually strengthened local currency bond markets.

    It warned against spillovers of banks’ credit risk to the sovereign through the direct banks’ exposure to the sovereign by holding government debt, the provision of government guarantees to cover banks’ losses, and  indirect risk transmission through diminished bank lending to households and corporations, undermining growth and raising fiscal and sovereign credit risk.

    Overall, it said that local debt markets are able to discern default risk, and hence, expectations regarding fiscal deficits play a significant role in determining local bond yields. In cases of elevated sovereign bank nexus, this relationship is amplified.

    The Fund said it used IMF’s Monetary and Financial Statistics (MFS) database to analyze the exposure of commercial banks, Central Banks, and other financial corporations (OFC) to the public sector.