Biya's regime gets fresh loan of FCfa 390.4 billion from the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
The
 Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved, on 26 July 
2017, a loan agreement for FCfa 390.4 billion (666 million dollars) for 
Cameroon. This loan, which is in line with the IMF Extended Credit 
Facility, will be
 spread over a period of 3 years, with a first 
immediate disbursement of slightly over FCfa 100 billion (171 million 
dollars), as part of the programme to restore financial viability and 
unlock growth in the private sector, we officially learned. “After showing resilience due to a larger diversification, the Cameroonian economy is now facing a slowdown in its growth, a decline in customs and foreign revenues and a growing public debt”, declared the Deputy Managing Director of the IMF, Mitsuhiro Furusawa, commenting on the decision of the Board of this Bretton Woods institution.
Indeed,
 in addition to the drop in international prices for crude oil, which 
has a significant impact on the public finances of the six CEMAC 
countries, Cameroon has been involved for close to 3 years now in an 
expensive war against the Nigerian Islamist sect Boko Haram, whose 
crimes in the Far North region have already cost the lives of over 1,000
 people, officially. 
Coupled
 with the decline in non-oil revenues, mainly due to the entry into 
force of the Economic Partnership Agreements with the European Union in 
August 2016, and the slowdown in the national economy (projected growth 
rate of 3.7% in 2017, against 4.4% in 2016, according to the IMF); the 
two above-mentioned external factors put considerable pressure on public
 finances, forcing Cameroon to further indebtedness to fulfil its 
sovereign missions. 
Through
 an order signed on 17 May 2017, the Head of State even had to increase 
the maximum debt limit of the country for the year 2017, moving it from 
FCfa 1,000 billion, initially to FCfa 1,700 billion; including FCfa 500 
billion in concessional loans and FCfa 1,200 in mon-concessional 
lending. All of which, at the end of the year 2017, should increase by 
2% the debt-GDP ratio of the country compared to the end of the year 
2016, to raise it over 30%. 
Incidentally,
 despite the fast rise of this indicator, local public authorities often
 deem it both satisfactory and sustainable, with regards to the 
convergence criteria in the CEMAC, which authorise each country in this 
community to contract a debt of up to 70% of its GDP. 
Source: Cameroonconcord.com

 
 
 
Debt at this point should be in extreme cases of need for funding and the current situation is not considered urgent. Our tax collection system still allows of about that much which is loaned to cameroon to go uncollected. Several large companies are not paying their fair share of taxes. Tax collection remains weak with Value Added Tax being under declared systematically.
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