BEIRUT: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Thursday it had reached a staff-level agreement with Lebanon for a four-year extended fund facility that would however only get full approval from the fund if Beirut enacts a series of reforms.
An agreement with the IMF is seen as vital for Lebanon to begin exiting a crippling economic and financial meltdown that marks its most destabilising crisis since the 1975-90 civil war.
The extended fund arrangement would run over 46 months and Lebanon had requested access to the equivalent of around $3 billion, the IMF said in a statement.
Lebanese authorities had agreed, prior to the IMF board considering whether to approve the deal, to complete eight reform measures.
These included approval of a banking restructuring strategy that “recognizes and addresses upfront the large losses in the sector, while protecting small depositors and limiting recourse to public resources.â€
The measures also included “initiation of an externally assisted bank-by-bank evaluation for the 14 largest banks,†parliamentary approval of a reformed banking secrecy law and completion of an audit of the central bank’s foreign asset position.
The facility would also depend on enactment of a comprehensive economic reform program agreed with the IMF, aimed at restoring financial sustainability, strengthening governance and transparency and removing impediments to job-creating growth, it said.
IMF, Lebanon reach staff-level funding deal, subject to reforms
Short Url
https://arab.news/vmuz9
Updated 07 April 2022
IMF, Lebanon reach staff-level funding deal, subject to reforms
