Radar | Apr 24,2023
Jun 3 , 2026
Ethiopia is set to receive a larger disbursement from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) after the Fund and Ethiopian authorities reached a staff-level agreement on the fifth review of the country’s four-year programme.
The agreement brings forward part of the financing to help the country cope with the economic impact of the war in the Middle East. Tobias Rasmussen, the IMF country representative for Ethiopia, confirmed to Fortune that the arrangement includes a plan to bring forward 200 million dollars to assist Ethiopia in managing the external shock caused by the regional conflict.
According to Rasmussen, the money is part of the existing A 3.4 billion dollar Extended Credit Facility (ECF) programme, not an increase in the total size of the facility.
The latest review, once approved by the IMF Executive Board, will make close to 468 million dollars available to Ethiopia. Within that amount, the “brought forward” 200 million dollars is intended to provide earlier balance-of-payments support as the country faces disrupted trade and sharp price increases for critical imports such as fuel and fertiliser.
The war in the Middle East has disrupted trade flows and increased the cost of essential imports, exposing an economy already managing foreign currency shortages, debt pressures, and the demands of a broad reform programme. Fuel and fertiliser are among the most sensitive imports for Ethiopia, with price increases carrying implications for transport costs, agricultural production, inflation, and public finances.
For the IMF, the front-loading is designed to help Ethiopia absorb these shocks without changing the total financing envelope. For Ethiopian authorities, the accelerated access to funds offers temporary relief at a time when external conditions have become more difficult and reform implementation remains politically and economically demanding.
The decision comes as Ethiopia continues to implement its Homegrown Economic Reform Agenda under the IMF-supported programme. Despite the pressures from the Middle East war, the IMF notes that “economic activity remains robust, government revenue is improving, and inflation is declining.”
To date, total IMF financial support under the current ECF arrangement has reareached 2.6 billion dollars.
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