Wednesday, November 17 2021 18:36

$72.5 million to be available to Armenia after IMF Board meeting in  Dec 

$72.5 million to be available to Armenia after IMF Board meeting in  Dec 

ArmInfo. About $72.5 million (SDR 51.429 million) would become available to Armenia after the MF Board meeting approves SBA. 

Below is a release by the IMF:

End-of-Mission press releases include statements of IMF staff teams  that convey preliminary findings after a visit to a country. The  views expressed in this statement are those of the IMF staff and do  not necessarily represent the views of the IMF's Executive Board.  Based on the preliminary findings of this mission, staff will prepare  a report that, subject to management approval, will be presented to  the IMF's Executive Board for discussion and decision.

GDP growth is expected to reach 5« percent in 2021 and 5¬ in 2022,  while inflation is projected to moderate in 2022 from its recent  highs.

Policy priorities are to further accelerate vaccinations, preserve  macroeconomic stability, and continue economic reforms to foster a  stronger, greener, and more inclusive growth.

"An International Monetary Fund (IMF) team, led by Nathan Porter,  conducted discussions during October 19-November 12, 2021 for the  2021 Article IV consultation, as well as the combined fourth and  fifth reviews of Armenia's economic program, which is supported by an  IMF Stand-By Arrangement (SBA). At the conclusion of the discussions,  Mr. Porter issued the following statement:

"We are pleased to announce that the IMF team has concluded  discussions for the 2021 Article IV consultation and has reached a  staff-level agreement with the Armenian authorities for the  conclusion of the fourth and fifth review under their economic reform  program, which is supported by a three-year Stand-By Arrangement. The  agreement is subject to approval by the IMF's Executive Board, which  is scheduled to consider this review in mid-December. About $72.5  million (SDR 51.429 million) would become available after the Board  meeting.

"The economy posted almost 5 percent growth in the first half of 2021  supported by strong external and domestic demand. Annual CPI  inflation accelerated to 9.1 percent in October driven by pent-up  consumption, supply constraints, global and domestic food inflation,  and pass-through from dram depreciation in early 2021. The fiscal  deficit narrowed in the first half of 2021 owing to strong revenue  collection, and a gradual scaling down of the emergency spending that  helped mitigate the impact of the twin shocks that hit Armenia in  2020. The banking system's capital and liquidity buffers have  remained strong, and the external position has also strengthened,  with the currency appreciating over the past few months.

"The recovery is expected to continue, with GDP growth of 5« and 5¬  percent in 2021 and 2022, respectively. While growth could accelerate  faster next year on the back of strong reforms, downside risks are  also elevated, including from the ongoing fourth wave of COVID-19  infections, geopolitical tensions, a slowdown in external demand, and  potentially heightened global financial market volatility. Inflation  is expected to begin moderating by mid-2022, as the effect of  supply-side and external shocks dissipate, and recent monetary policy  actions have their full impact. The Central Bank of Armenia continues  to proactively manage the challenges from above-target inflation and  an uncertain global environment, and should remain ready to adjust  its monetary stance as necessary while allowing the exchange rate to  be a shock absorber. The draft 2022 budget balances near-term support  with the medium-term needs for higher capital spending and is in line  with Armenia's fiscal rules and the need to rebuild fiscal buffers  over time.  Robust exports and remittances are expected to narrow the  current account deficit in 2021.

"Beyond the near-term, it is important to maintain the strong policy  and reform efforts, building fiscal buffers and further strengthening  medium-term sustainability; reducing inflation towards the Central  Bank's target of 4 percent; safeguarding financial stability; and  delivering sustained, green, and inclusive growth. In this regard, we  share many of the objectives of the Government's 5-year program which  focuses on the pursuit of a knowledge-based, export-oriented,  investment-driven growth strategy, aimed at reducing poverty and  improving living standards. To achieve these objectives, it is  important to develop concrete action plans with associated key  performance indicators and costing, fully operationalize the recently  approved public investment management decree, complete the PPP  operational framework, strengthen fiscal risk management,  transparency and governance, and improve the business environment,  while at the same time creating space through growth-friendly  revenue-enhancing tax policies, spending prioritization, and higher  quality public investment.

"The IMF team thanks the Armenian authorities, representatives of  civil society, private sector, development partner, and diplomatic  community for fruitful discussions and cooperation."