Too soon to conclude outcome of BE bank

The Deputy Governor of the National Reserve Bank of Angola (BNA), Pedro Castro e Silva, has said it is still “very early” to reach a conclusion about the outcome of the case involving the Economic Bank (BE), whose situation is being monitored “carefully,” by the regulator.

Pedro e Silva said the bank’s recapitalisation plan is underway, with the aim to provide the institution with more liquidity to generate profitability to strengthen its capital.

Speaking at a press conference, as part of the 110th session of the BNA Monetary Policy Committee, Pedro e Silva confirmed the resignation of the chief executive of the BE bank, having pointed to the prompt intervention of the Board of Directors and shareholders to appoint a replacement who is familiar with the BE’s restructuring and recapitalisation plan.

At the moment, Silva said, the BNA is closely following the implementation of the plan, which is based on recovering liquidity levels.

The regulator, the BNA, says it is in a phase of corrective intervention with the BE.

Past this phase, from a total of three acting as regulator, an interim administration and resolution may follow.

Minimum share capital

The BNA official said that most of the banks have met the minimum share capital increase of 15 billion kwanzas, as many were already in this position.

Without giving names, he said that there were only two banks (in the recovery phase) that were being monitored by the BNA.

Despite the two banks that are still missing, he said that the increase in the minimum share capital of the banks has been successful.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

AGT and INEJ sign cooperation protocol on tax matters

The General Tax Administration (AGT) and the National Institute of Judicial Studies (INEJ) signed, on the 20th of this month, a cooperation protocol aimed at technical training in tax matters for judicial magistrates and the Public Prosecution Department.

The cooperation agreement foresees, among other aspects, the implementation of actions that allow the continuous improvement of the handling of tax criminal cases by the judges.

According to a press release, the protocol also aims to safeguard the proper framework of tax and customs rules and procedures.

On the occasion, the INEJ’s general director, Artur Gunza, a signatory party, considered that the referred agreement is part of the annual continuous plan for the training of judicial magistrates and public prosecutors.

“As you may understand, our magistrates do not deal with these matters in their day-to-day lives. Since AGT, at this time, is creating a new dynamic for the accountability of citizens who transgress in this domain. Therefore, it is imperative that magistrates get updated in these matters”, said Artur Gunza.

On his turn, the Chairman of the Board of Directors of the General Tax Administration (AGT), José Leiria, considered that the partnership will train judges in tax matters and thus provide a better response to tax-related processes.

“We have the judges as those who dominate the judicial system and can also help us to model the application of tax rules”, said the José Leiria.

The General Tax Administration (AGT), created by Presidential Decree n.º 324/14, of December 15, is a State body, supervised by the Ministry of Finance, whose mission is to raise revenue for the State and ensure customs control for the benefit of society.

Within this framework, it is also incumbent upon the information and training of tax-paying citizens, in order to guarantee literacy and fiscal citizenship, for the efficiency and effectiveness of the collection of revenues for the State, to support the administrative expenses of the State and guarantee the functionality of public and collective services.

The National Institute of Judicial Studies (INEJ) has the mission of ensuring the training of the staff necessary for the applying of judicial activity and other specific functions in the field of justice, records and notary, civil and criminal identification, public defence and other areas of the judiciary system, as a result of Presidential Decree No. 84/15, of May 5th, which approves the INEJ’s Organic Statute.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

US Foreign Aid Agency Continues to Invest in Africa

Branching out from the usual bilateral agreements between the United States and individual nations, the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) recently crafted a new type of grant to promote cross-border economic integration and trade between two African countries.

The first so-called regional compact in the amount of $504 million — $202 million for Benin and $302 million for Niger — will focus on reducing transportation costs between Benin’s Port of Cotonou and Niger’s capital of Niamey.

But there’s more, said Mahmoud Bah, deputy chief executive officer of the MCC, an independent U.S. agency that has been providing foreign assistance around the world for nearly two decades.

“It will also try to address some of the root causes of maintaining road assets,” he said. “In both countries, they’ve committed to improving road maintenance, so there will be policy and institutional reforms around road maintenance, contributions, how the fund is flowing and how those funds are allocated to roads that actually need to be maintained.”

Benin and Niger will contribute a combined total of $15 million to the various projects.

The regional compact also aims to eliminate trade bottlenecks between the two nations and cut down on spoilage from delays, Bah told VOA.

MCC previously invested $1.1 billion in Benin and Niger. Some of that money went toward eliminating procedural constraints affecting the flow of goods through the Port of Cotonou.

The new projects aim to build on progress made.

“We hope that we will connect our previous investment to this new investment,” said Bah. “The port of Benin is effectively a model in the region, thanks to the work we jointly did, and this road piece connecting that port to customers, farmers, clients in Niamey along the corridor from Cotonou is the big story here. I truly believe that regional integration is an essential piece of the entire continent’s development.”

Other grants in the works

In southern Africa, MCC recently signed a memorandum committing Washington and Maputo to pursue a compact later this year to protect Mozambique’s coastal areas.

“Mozambique is one country that is faced with extreme adverse effects of climate,” said Bah. “Sixty-five percent of Mozambicans live on the coastal part of Mozambique. It has 2,300 kilometers of coast, and it’s being pounded every year by heavier and heavier cyclones. In the last five years, Mozambique had four 100-year cyclones — cyclones that are supposed to happen every hundred years.”

About four years ago, Cyclone Idai killed hundreds in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi and displaced millions in what the United Nations called “one of the worst weather-related catastrophes in the history of Africa.”

In Mozambique, Bah also visited mangroves, which are slated for funding in an upcoming MCC compact.

“It’s the ecosystem that allows the planet to survive certain climatic impacts, but it’s being taken away by these cyclones,” he said. “Also, the mangroves themselves are being chopped to make charcoal, but the people that are chopping these mangroves have no other alternatives.”

MCC also hopes to help restore an 80-year-old bridge on the brink of collapse and connect small farmers by helping them become more commercially viable.

Eligibility criteria

To receive money from MCC, a country needs to meet the agency’s standards on a range of criteria, from good governance to economic freedom.

And even after receiving funds, the criteria need to be respected throughout implementation. For that reason, MCC recently terminated Burkina Faso’s grant funding after a military takeover.

“When we see a coup d’etat, especially the military coup d’etat, it calls into question the model and what for us … is a red line,” said Bah. “We cannot face Congress and say, ‘We need to support this country,’ when in fact we see an attempt or a confiscation of the constitution by a group of military [forces].”

Bah said he hoped the partnership between the two countries would soon be restored, because it was a tough decision for the MCC to stop the work that had already begun.

Meanwhile, MCC is working on signing a compact with Sierra Leone this year to help make electricity cheaper and its energy sector more reliable.

Other potential beneficiaries in Africa include Mauritania, Togo and Gambia. Senegal will be tapped for the next regional compact.

Free money?

MCC started under a Republican administration nearly 20 years ago and has benefited from bipartisan support.

To the skeptics who say there’s no such thing as free money, Bah said the only cost of getting an MCC grant is abiding by the agency’s model and meeting the eligibility criteria. Otherwise, the grants are not to be repaid.

And to anyone who may be uneasy with taxpayer money being spent overseas, here is one way to look at it, he told VOA.

“When countries grow and have a peaceful transfer of power, where they have a democratically elected government, there is a tendency for that growth to be contagious and for us to spend less money in those countries than the alternative,” said Bah.

“So, it’s an opportunity for businesses in the U.S. to find frontier emerging markets where they can invest. It’s an opportunity for our partner countries to invest in the U.S. To me, it’s a win-win situation.”

Source: Voice of America

World food prices hit record high in 2022: UN

PARIS, World food prices fell for a ninth month in a row in December but hit their highest level on record for the full year in 2022, UN data showed.

Food prices soared to a monthly record high in March after Russia invaded agricultural powerhouse Ukraine, a major supplier of wheat and cooking oil to the world.

But prices have dropped since then, with more relief brought by a deal brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in July that lifted a Russian naval blockade on Ukrainian grain exports.

The Food and Agriculture Organization said Friday its price index, which tracks the monthly change in international prices of a basket of food commodities, fell to 132.4 points in December, a 1.9 percent drop from November.

It was also one percent lower than in December 2021.

But the index was 14.3 percent higher overall in 2022 compared to the previous year as it reached an all-time high of 143.7 points.

“Calmer food commodity prices are welcome after two very volatile years,” FAO chief economist Maximo Torero said in a statement.

“It is important to remain vigilant and keep a strong focus on mitigating global food insecurity given that world food prices remain at elevated levels,” he said.

Torero said many staples are near record highs, with prices of rice rising and “still many risks associated with future supplies”.

World prices of maize were 24.8 percent higher on average in 2022 than in 2021, according to the FAO. Wheat was 15.6 percent more expensive.

But maize prices fell in December, mostly due to “strong competition” from Brazil, the FAO said.

Wheat was also down for the month “as ongoing harvests in the southern hemisphere boosted supplies and competition among exporters remained strong”.

The FAO’s vegetable oil price index reached a new record high in 2022 but fell 6.7 percent month-on-month in December to its lowest level since February 2021.

Dairy and meat prices hit their highest levels since 1990, the agency said. While meat prices fell 1.2 percent in December, those of dairy rose 1.1 percent for the month.

Source: Nam News Network

Will African Nations Get Debt Help from IMF and China?

Long-running tensions between the major international lenders and China were aired at a meeting in China’s Anhui province, where participants sought agreement on a way forward for some of the world’s most indebted countries, many of them in Africa.

Representatives of the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and Beijing’s finance ministry participated in the meeting to discuss debt restructuring for low-income countries — 60% of which the IMF says are at or near debt distress.

The relationship between the IMF and China — the world’s largest bilateral creditor — has not been an easy one, Harry Verhoeven, a senior research scholar at Columbia University, told VOA.

“The Fund has in recent years come under great pressure from its most important shareholders — the U.S. and European countries — to be much tougher on China and debt — and to help identify ways that either expose China as driving the build-up of unsustainable levels of indebtedness in African states” or that force China to cancel some of the debts owed to Beijing, he said.

“Yet on the other hand, the Fund also suffers from a crisis of legitimacy related to its perceived prioritizing of Western interests and concerns,” he added. “A growing number of developing countries in recent years/decades have sought to turn away from the Fund and deeply distrust its advice and conditionalities.”

What African countries hoped for as the outcome of this meeting, analysts said, was a combination of debt restructuring and forgiveness — as well as more predictability and reassurances that fresh capital will still be available to them.

“A large number of African countries’ balance sheets are shot to bits and these countries are technically insolvent,” said Kenya-based economist Aly-Khan Satchu.

Conciliatory tone

The press releases from both Beijing and the IMF after the meeting struck an optimistic tone.

IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva said she had a “fruitful exchange” with her Chinese counterparts on how to accelerate debt relief to prevent “triggering a global debt crisis.”

Georgieva said China could “play an active role” in helping speed up the Common Framework, a plan by the G-20 announced two years ago to help countries buckling under debt by getting private creditors to participate and share the burden fairly.

So far, only Ethiopia, Chad and Zambia have made requests for debt relief under the Common Framework.

Ethiopia has been suffering a civil war, so its restructuring has been delayed, according to Reuters. Chad has completed the debt treatment process — although the agreement has been criticized for failing to reduce Chad’s overall debt.

“We need to build on the momentum of the agreement on Chad’s debt treatment and accelerate and finalize the debt treatments for Zambia and Sri Lanka, which would allow for disbursements from the IMF and multilateral development banks,” said Georgieva.

In 2020, Zambia became the first African nation in the COVID-19 pandemic era to default on its loans. In July its official creditors, led by China, agreed to provide debt relief. The move was welcomed by the International Monetary Fund, but the process is moving slowly. The finance minister of Zambia recently told Reuters he hopes his country will complete its debt-restructuring by the first quarter of 2023.

Meanwhile, crisis-hit Sri Lanka, which defaulted on its sovereign debt this year, is not eligible for the Common Framework because it’s a middle-income country. However, it has begun debt-restructuring talks, with creditors China, India and Japan playing key roles in the outcome.

The Chinese response

China has often come under criticism, especially from U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, for not participating enough in international efforts to reduce developing nations’ debt burdens or for delaying those efforts.

However, after last week’s meeting, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said that “China will continue to strengthen macro-policy coordination with all parties, including the IMF, to tackle debt” and will “work with relevant G-20 members to formulate and participate in a fair and equitable debt-restructuring plan.”

“As expected, China and the IMF made lots of positive noises about China’s role in finalizing restructuring for Sri Lanka and Zambia, as both the [IMF] managing director and the Beijing leadership need each other to recognize the efforts and legitimacy of the other,” said Verhoeven.

However, “there was no full-throated endorsement of the IMF-led Common Framework for Debt Treatments by China,” he noted, something the IMF would have liked.

Verhoeven noted that in the IMF’s communique after the Anhui meeting, “there was a recognition that the Framework must become more functional and predictable, which in Beijing translates as a recognition that China should not be uniquely vilified for the accumulation of debts by emerging economies in Africa and elsewhere.”

China has often been accused by the West of practicing “debt-trap diplomacy” — deliberately lending to countries that it knows cannot pay back, thereby increasing its political leverage — though the theory has largely been rejected by academics.

Just this week, China’s ambassador to the U.S., Qin Gang, cited a report by British charity Debt Justice that shows African countries in fact owe three times as much to Western private lenders.

China has often argued that multilateral development banks should also participate in debt restructurings.

Hard road ahead

World Bank President David Malpass was also in attendance at the Anhui meeting and took a more confrontational line than Georgieva, saying: “In our meetings, we discussed in detail the debt crisis that is intensifying in the world’s poorest countries and China’s role and responsibility in initiating and implementing solutions.”

He said there is an urgent need for more rapid progress in debt restructuring discussions for Zambia and that “changes in China’s positions are critical in this effort.”

He also urged China to be transparent in its loan contracts to help investors make informed decisions.

Kenya-based economist Satchu was not convinced the meeting achieved much, in the end.

“The Chinese clearly prefer to maintain a degree of autonomy in all discussions with debtor countries and I suspect this visit was an attempt to reach some kind of modus operandi between the IMF and China after some quite ham-fisted railroading attempts by the IMF,” he said.

“In a geoeconomic context, it’s crystal clear China’s Africa lending appetite is satiated, that the U.S. and the Multilaterals will need to step into the breach. … The challenge for the U.S. [and the IMF] is that … a lot of these new funds will be round-tripped back to China to pay down Chinese loans,” said Satchu.

Source: Voice of America

US Pledging Tens of Billions of Dollars for Africa

The United States plans to commit $55 billion to Africa over the next three years, according to White House officials. The announcement comes as the administration of President Joe Biden hosts a two-day meeting with African leaders.

The U.S. three-year funding pledge contains $20 billion for health programs in Africa.

Speaking to African leaders Wednesday at a business forum, President Joe Biden said the United States is all in on Africa’s future, and he announced new trade opportunities and infrastructure commitments, including for clean energy and the digital economy.

“Improving Africa’s infrastructure is essential to our vision of building a stronger global economy that can better withstand the kinds of shocks that we’ve seen the past few years,” Biden said.

The U.S. president is facing some criticism for not interacting individually with the visiting African leaders. Administration officials say soon, Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and some Cabinet secretaries will individually be visiting Africa for detailed discussions.

Source: Voice of America