Chapo’s hopes for IMF approval were dashed on Tuesday (17 February) by the IMF Executive Board, with no discussion of a new loan or programme. President Daniel Chapo has publicly put his hope on a new loan and programme triggering investment and aid. The IMF mission 12-21 November took a hard line, which was supported today by the Executive Board.
The main IMF demands stand – substantial devaluation plus major fiscal and wage reforms. The Board said “A clear communication of reform objectives would be critical to ensure stakeholder buy-in and help build public trust.” The Board statement and November report are on:https://www.imf.org/en/news/articles/2026/02/14/pr-26052-mozambique-imf-executive-board-concludes-2025-article-iv-consultation-with-mozambiqueandhttps://www.imf.org/en/news/articles/2025/11/21/pr-25387-mozambique-imf-staff-completes-2025-article-iv-mission READ:Mozambique needs fiscal consolidation as financing problems mount, IMF says The Executive Board again demanded devaluation. For five years the exchange rate has been fixed at $1 = 63.9 MT (mid-rate) which means the Metical is overvalued.
Its real value is probably $1 = 90 MT. The current rate makes imports cheap and exports less profitable. This has come up recently in the debate over importing food.
Read Full Article on Club of Mozambique
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In 2024 Mozambique imported $441mn of rice and $220mn of cooking oil. Both are produced locally, but cheap imports undercut local producers. A realistic exchange rate would end those imports and increase local farming of rice and oilseeds to fill the gap – and create 1000s of jobs.
But Frelimo oligarchs control the highly profitable food imports. The Executive Board again stressed “containing the wage bill, broadening the tax base, enhancing public financial management, addressing fiscal risks from state-owned enterprises, and strengthening debt management and transparency, while protecting vulnerable groups.” The last two hit home. Too much, such as the recent salary scale revision, is done in secret and benefit better off Frelimo cadres.
And the November 2024 to March 2025 demonstrations moved from demanding “electoral truth” to stressing corruption, poverty and lack of jobs. The IMF’s rejection of Chapo’s appeals suggests that it is willing to risk young people being shot on the streets, rather than allow national economic collapse.
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