According to a press release on 28 February 2023, the IMF staff and the Nepal authorities have reached staff-level agreement on the policies needed to complete the combined first and second reviews of the ECF arrangement. Nepal would have access to about US$52 million in financing once the review is formally approved by the Executive Board.
The IMF stated that the external audit of the Nepal Rastra Bank with the assistance of international auditors – in line with international best practices, publication of reports on both COVID-related spending and custom exemptions to enhance transparency, drafting of amendments to bank asset classification regulations, and strengthening bank supervision by launching the donor-supported Supervision Information System were notable achievements. It further notes that the monetary tightening and gradual unwinding of COVID-19 support measures helped moderate credit growth and contributed to the moderation of inflation stemming from the global commodity price shock caused by the Ukraine war. This combined with resilient remittances eased external pressures and stabilized international reserves but tax collections dampened. It recommended cautious monetary policy and expenditure rationalization while protecting high-quality infrastructure expenditure and social spending.
The ECF-supported program will help Nepal’s economy to remain on a sustainable path over the medium term with the economy projected to grow at around 5 percent and inflation at around 6 percent, while maintaining adequate levels of international reserves and keeping public debt at a sustainable level. The next priority should be given to achieving a fiscal deficit that ensures debt sustainability, while securing additional concessional financing and enhancing debt management.