
KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) executive board approved the disbursement of around US$866 million for Jamaica on Thursday as part of two loan programs designed to strengthen the country’s economy against multiple shocks.
“Important progress has been made on the fiscal reform agenda,” IMF Deputy Managing Director Antoinette Monsio Sayeh said in a statement announcing the completion of the first review of the agreements signed in March.
That progress includes reforming the Caribbean nation’s public wage structure and improving its fiscal policy framework.
Jamaica’s economy has bounced back following a challenging period during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The IMF said in March it expected the country’s real GDP growth to reach around four percent last year but warned of risks ahead from various factors, including the lingering impact of the war in Ukraine.
On Thursday, the IMF board made available around US$611 million under an agreement it has previously said is designed “to provide insurance against risks from higher commodity prices, a global slowdown, tighter-than-envisaged global financial conditions, and new COVID outbreaks.”
A further US$255 million was made available under a second loan agreement to strengthen Jamaica’s resilience to climate change and better prepare it for decarbonization and the transition to a greener economy.






















































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