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IMF approves much-awaited $3 billion bailout for Pakistan, saving it from defaulting on debt

In this photo released by Pakistan's Prime Minister Office, Prime Minister Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, right, meets with International Monetary Fund's managing director Kristalina Georgieva, in Paris, France, June 22, 2023.  (Prime Minister Office via AP) In this photo released by Pakistan's Prime Minister Office, Prime Minister Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, right, meets with International Monetary Fund's managing director Kristalina Georgieva, in Paris, France, June 22, 2023. (Prime Minister Office via AP)
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ISLAMABAD -

Pakistan's finance minister on Thursday said the International Monetary Fund deposited a much-awaited first installment of US$1.2 billion with the country's central bank under a recently signed bailout deal aimed at helping the impoverished Islamic nation avoid defaulting on its debt repayments.

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar in televised remarks said the remaining US$1.8 billion would be received from the IMF over the next nine months. The funds will bolster the country's foreign exchange reserves, which shrank to less than US$4 billion in recent months, raising fears of a default.

Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves are likely to rise to US$14 billion this week, Dar said.

The latest development came a day after the IMF said its executive board had approved an agreement to release a US$3 billion loan to support Pakistan's economic stabilization program.

Wednesday's announcement came less than two weeks after Pakistan and the IMF agreed to the plan following meetings with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Dar and other officials.

IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva said in a statement Wednesday that "Pakistan's economy was hit hard by significant shocks last year, notably the spillovers from the severe impacts of floods, the large volatility in commodity prices, and the tightening of external and domestic financing conditions."

She said the US$3 billion bailout, if "implemented faithfully" by Pakistan, will give it an opportunity to regain macroeconomic stability and address imbalances through consistent policy implementation.

The IMF bailout for Pakistan had been on hold since December because of the country's lack of compliance with a 2019 agreement, signed between the IMF and former Prime Minister Imran Khan. A breakthrough in talks came last month when Sharif met with Georgieva in Paris at the Summit for a New Global Financing Pact to discuss the revival of the US$6 billion bailout that was to expire on June 30.

Sharif's talks with the IMF resulted in the signing of a new nine-month deal. Since coming to power in April 2022 after Khan was ousted in a no-confidence vote in parliament, Sharif has been grappling with an economic downturn.

Pakistan's economy witnessed a major shock last summer, when devastating floods killed 1,739 people and caused US$30 billion in damage.

This month again, rivers swollen by monsoon rains have inundated dozens of villages in Pakistan's eastern Punjab province, displacing 1,500 people. Nearly 90 people have died in weather-related incidents since June 25 when the monsoon rains began.

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