Malawi can expect the first half of a 50 million dollars structural adjustment credit from the World Bank next month, a bank official told IRIN on Wednesday.
The second tranche of the credit will be given to Malawi in October, subject to certain conditions, which include commercialisation of the Agricultural Development and Marketing Corporation (ADMARC), said the Banks country economist, Maxwell Nkwezalamba.
Restructuring ADMARC would entail closing down its “unprofitable markets”, including ones which cater to the rural communities in Malawi. The government was currently examining several models, such as “hiving off” unprofitable markets to a state body, or calling for tenders from the private sector.
Expressing confidence in the Malawian governments handling of expenditure, Nkwezalamba pointed out that the British government was expected to pump at least 19 million dollars into the country in the coming months, while a further 19 million dollars was expected from the European Union in the next few weeks, with 5 million dollars more from Norway.
After a review of the governments economic performance, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) broke a three-year aid freeze on Malawi late last year and released a 9,2 million dollars tranche from a 64,5 million dollars concessional Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility originally approved in 2000.
The IMF is conducting its second quarterly review in March and is expected to announce the next disbursement shortly.
Aid was frozen by the IMF and major Western donors in a response to government overspending and lack of transparency. Up to 80 percent of Malawis development budget is funded by donors.
Kilde: FN-bureauet IRINnews.
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