APA-Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) Ethiopia has requested the official creditors committee (OCC) to consider restructuring its debt it borrowed from various financial institutions.
The East African nation’s Finance minister Afmed Shide mae a request to this effect to William Roos, co-chair of the Official Creditors Committee (OCC). for Ethiopia.
“The two parties discussed the progress of the OCC’s work and the steps to accelerate Ethiopia’s debt treatment,” the Ministry of Finance said in a statement on Thursday.
The meeting comes after progress made in recent talks between the IMF and Ethiopia over a new IMF support program, which has to do with for debt revamp.
The creditor committee for Ethiopia was formed on September 16, 2021, more than a year after its application for debt treatments was endorsed by a group of 20 top economies and the Paris Club.
The committee, which is co-chaired by China and France, has since met five times to discuss the request and provide Ethiopia the necessary financing assurance.
French Assistant Secretary of Economy Roos, in his capacity as the Co-Chair of the Paris Club and the Co-Chair of the official creditors committee for Ethiopia, briefed Ahmed about the current state of the discussion, according to the Ministry of Finance.
He also spoke about “the working dynamics of the OCC and the commitment shown by all creditors to deliver a financing assurance in line with the broader IMF program,” MoF’s statement says.
Ross highlighted the success of Creditor Committees that completed debt treatment requests for Chad and Zambia.
The French Assistant Secretary assured Finance Minister Ahmed “of the dedication of the Paris Club to expeditiously resolve the debt treatment request of Ethiopia,” the statement reads.
The G20 Common Framework was launched in 2020 and designed to streamline debt restructuring efforts in the wake of poor countries buckling under the fallout from the pandemic.
The restructuring process is often criticized for its slow progress. The President of the World Bank Group urged creditors to accelerate the work on debt treatments sought by Ethiopia.
The country reportedly had about $26 billion of external liabilities as of September, mainly from China, and has spent $1.7 billion in debt service payments in the first half of the current fiscal year alone.
Securing debt restructuring deal will allow the IMF to seek board approval of new extended credit facility agreement, which could unlock financial support for authorities’ reform program.
MG/as/APA