Zambia 2013 Article Iv Consultation

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IMF Country Report No.

14/5

ZAMBIA
January 2014

2013 ARTICLE IV CONSULTATION


Under Article IV of the IMFs Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. In the context of the 2013 Article IV Consultation with Zambia, the following documents have been released and are included in this package:

The Staff Report for the 2013 Article IV Consultation, prepared by a staff team of the IMF for the Executive Boards consideration on December 11, 2013, following discussions that ended on October 12 , 2013 with the officials of Zambia on economic developments and policies. Based on information available at the time of these discussions, the staff report was completed on November 26, 2013. An Informational Annex prepared by the IMF in consultation with the World Bank. Debt Sustainability Analysis prepared by the staffs of the IMF and the World Bank. A Press Release summarizing the views of the Executive Board as expressed during its December 11, 2013 consideration of the staff report that concluded the Article IV Consultation with Zambia. A Statement by the Executive Director for Zambia.

The policy of publication of staff reports and other documents allows for the deletion of market-sensitive information.

Copies of this report are available to the public from International Monetary Fund Publication Services 700 19th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20431 Telephone: (202) 623-7430 Telefax: (202) 623-7201 E-mail: publications@imf.org Internet: http://www.imf.org Price: $18.00 a copy International Monetary Fund Washington, D.C.

2014 International Monetary Fund

ZAMBIA
STAFF REPORT FOR THE 2013 ARTICLE IV CONSULTATION
November 26, 2013

KEY ISSUES
Context. The Zambian economy has performed well in recent years, with strong growth and modest inflation, and has high growth potential. The government has resolved to step up development by scaling up investment in infrastructure. However, this year has seen a significant loosening of fiscal policy, leading to a large fiscal deficit. Outlook and risks. Assuming front-loaded fiscal adjustment toward a sustainable deficit, growth is projected to remain strong at 78 percent and inflation to decline gradually to 5 percent over the medium term. Key risks to the outlook are the uncertainties about fiscal policy and the broader business environment, and a possible slowdown in emerging markets and its impact on copper prices. Fiscal stance. The current fiscal stance is unsustainable. To improve Zambias fiscal position, fundamental reforms are required to contain the wage bill and recurrent expenditures, boost domestic revenue, and create fiscal space for infrastructure investment. Staff recommended reducing deficits to 5 percent of GDP in 2014 and gradually to 3 percent over the medium term, and bringing down net domestic financing to 1-2 percent of GDP to avoid crowding out the private sector. Public financial management (PFM). To support fiscal consolidation, PFM reform needs to be stepped up. Investment planning and implementation also need to be strengthened to support planned scaling up of capital expenditures, and debt management strengthened in light of the increasing reliance on non-concessional financing. Monetary policy. Given the low level of international reserves, the Bank of Zambia (BOZ) should allow more exchange rate flexibility and continue to build up reserves in line with their medium-term target. BOZ also needs to continue to tighten monetary policy to contain inflation. Competitiveness. Over the last decade, Zambias competitiveness has been boosted by strengthened macroeconomic fundamentals and a favorable business environment. However, a series of recent regulations have raised questions about the policy direction, and high minimum wages could hamper the countrys competitiveness, job creation, and economic diversification.

ZAMBIA

Approved By

David Owen and Chris Lane

Discussions took place in Lusaka during July 3-16 and September 1724, and in Washington October 10-12. The staff team comprised J. Wakeman-Linn (head), K. Ismail, B. Jang (all AFR), M. Arena (SPR), and T. Rasmussen (resident representative). Ms. Kapwepwe (OED) participated in the discussions. The mission met with the Minister of Finance; the Governor of the Bank of Zambia; other senior government officials; and representatives of the private sector, trade unions, civil society, and the donor community.

CONTENTS
DECADE OF PROGRESS BUT THE ECONOMY AT A CROSSROADS ____________________________ 4 POLICIES GOING FORWARD_____________________________________________________________________ 6 A. Fiscal Policy: Close the Financing Gaps and Realign Priorities ___________________________________7 B. PFM: Step up Reforms to Support Fiscal Consolidation _______________________________________ 12 C. Improve Investment Planning and Maintain Debt Sustainability ______________________________ 12 D. Monetary Policy: Ensure Flexibility to Maintain Macroeconomic Stability _____________________ 13 E. Financial Sector: Address Structural Constraints _______________________________________________ 16 F. Boosting Competitiveness and Inclusive Growth ______________________________________________ 17 G. Strengthening Statistics _______________________________________________________________________ 18 STAFF APPRAISAL ______________________________________________________________________________ 18 BOXES 1. Subsidy Reform __________________________________________________________________________________5 2. Pension Reform ________________________________________________________________________________ 10 FIGURES 1. Real Sector Developments _____________________________________________________________________ 28 2. Fiscal Developments ___________________________________________________________________________ 29 3. External Developments ________________________________________________________________________ 30 4. Banking Sector Developments _________________________________________________________________ 31

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TABLES 1. Selected Economic Indicators, 201118 _______________________________________________________ 21 2. Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 201118 (Millions of Kwacha) __________________ 22 3. Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 201118 (Percent of GDP) _____________________ 23 4. Monetary Account, 201118 ___________________________________________________________________ 24 5. Balance of Payments, 201118_________________________________________________________________ 25 6. Financial Soundness Indicators, 200713 ______________________________________________________ 26 7. Millennium Development Goals, 200210 _____________________________________________________ 27 APPENDICES I. Competitiveness ________________________________________________________________________________ 32 II. Risk Assessment Matrix ________________________________________________________________________ 40 III. A Regional Comparison of Government Wage Spending _____________________________________ 41 IV. External Stability Assessment _________________________________________________________________ 46 V. Lending Rate Ceilings and Their Impact on the Nonbanking Sector __________________________ 48

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DECADE OF PROGRESS BUT THE ECONOMY AT A CROSSROADS


1. Decade of progress. Zambia has achieved high, sustained growththanks to strong growth in copper production and prudent macroeconomic policiesand macroeconomic stability over the past decade, supported by two Extended Real GDP and CPI Credit Facility (ECF) arrangements. During 25 8 (Percent change) this period, Zambia received debt relief of $5.5 billion. Public debt was just over 20 6 30 percent of GDP at end-2012, of which 15 about half was external debt. GDP per capita 4 in PPP terms has almost doubled since 2000. 10 However, poverty remains high (in 2010, an 2 estimated 60.5 percent of the population was 5 CPI Real GDP, rhs living in poverty and 42.3 percent in extreme 0 0 poverty) and infrastructure needs to be 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 improved substantially (Ex-Post Assessment Source: Zambian authorities. update, 2011). 2. Growth and inflation. Output grew 7.2 percent in 2012, supported by strong performance in agriculture, construction, and communication services. Growth is expected to decline to 6 percent in 2013, mainly owing to lower agricultural production. Inflation was slightly above the BOZ target of 7 percent at end-2012, and was 6.9 percent in October 2013, mainly driven by non-food inflation. 3. Fiscal developments. The government conducted fiscal policy prudently in recent years, and the 2013 budget targeted a deficit of 4.1 percent of GDP (broadly consistent with the 2012 Article IV recommendations), with significant increases in capital spending. However, the actual fiscal deficit for 2013 is projected to be roughly double the budgeted level, mainly as a result of significant overspending on recurrent items, primarily Spread to Benchmark for Selected Eurobonds (Basis points) 800 subsidies and wages. Senegal (B+ 1/) 4. External position. The current account was roughly balanced in 2012, but is expected to move into a deficit of 1.3 percent of GDP in 2013, despite rapidly growing non-traditional exports, reflecting lower copper prices and rising imports. FDI has been increasing in recent years, largely in mining. International reserves are increasing slowly, but remain low after sharp declines earlier in 2013. In January700 Namibia (BBB- 2/) South Africa (BBB 1/ 2/) 600 Nigeria (BB- 1/ 2/) Zambia (B; B+ until 10/28/13 2/)

500

400

300

200

Jun-12

Jun-13

100

Jun-11

Jan-11

Jul-12

Aug-12

Jul-13

May-12

May-13

Aug-13

Jul-11

Aug-11

Sep-11

Nov-11

Dec-11

Apr-11

Feb-12 Mar-12

Sep-12

Nov-12

Dec-12

Feb-13 Mar-13

Jan-12

Feb-11 Mar-11

Jan-13

Sep-13

May-11

Sources: Bloomberg, Fitch and S&P. 1/ S&P 2/ Fitch

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

Nov-13

Oct-12

Apr-12

Apr-13

Oct-13

Oct-11

ZAMBIA

April 2013, BOZ sold foreign exchange to offset depreciation pressures. The possible tapering of unconventional monetary policy in the U.S. has had little impact on Zambias Eurobond yields, but reflecting concerns about the Zambian economy, Zambias Eurobond spreads have during 2013 increased more than those of other African countries. 5. Financial sector. The banking sector has grown steadily and remains profitable and wellcapitalized. Private sector credit growth has started slowing down in 2013 from a rapid increase in the second half of 2012. Nonperforming loans declined to 8.2 percent of total loans in mid-2013 from 15 percent in 2010. 6. Past advice and recent reform measures. In line with earlier advice, the government recently made progress in structural reforms by curtailing fuel and agricultural subsidies (Box 1) and announcing a pension reform plan that will include an increase the pension age to 65 from 55 years. The authorities have also made progress in improving access to financial services, and the government increased BOZs capital substantially. BOZ has proceeded flexibly and gradually with the implementation of the increased capital requirement for banks. However, traction on PFM reforms, including on fiscal reporting and quality control, has been weak and the fiscal situation has deteriorated sharply in 2013. Box 1. Subsidy Reform
Subsidies for fuel, maize, and agricultural inputs have in recent years been a source of significant budget overruns in Zambia. During 2010-13, these subsidies averaged close to 3 percent of GDP in total, of which only about one quarter was provided for in the original budgets. Aside from being difficult to manage, the programs have been widely criticized as being excessively costly and not obtaining good value for money. To rein in expenditures and better target those in need, the Zambian government has embarked on a major subsidy reform. Retail fuel prices were raised in May 2013 by an average of almost 22 percent, eliminating a mounting subsidy and generating savings for the government of about 1.2 percent of GDP. Around the same time, Government announced that it would reduce the scale of the Food Reserve Agencys operations and eliminate the difference between its buying and selling price for maize. Moreover, the price of fertilizer under the Farmer Input Support Program was doubled. While the reforms are still underway and the full savings are yet to be realized, the combined cost of the latter two programs is expected to be reduced to 1.0 percent of GDP in 2014 from 2.2 percent of GDP on average during 2010-13. In addition, starting from the 2014 budget, the authorities have decided to accurately reflect all maize-related activity on budget. Along with the reduction of subsidies, government is scaling up social cash transfers to better assist the poor. The budgeted allocation to such transfers is being increased almost tenfold to K150 million in 2014 (about 0.1 percent of GDP) to provide some 143,000 of the poorest households with about $12 a month. This program will cover approximately 13 percent of those in extreme poverty, and for the average recipient household the transfer should boost consumption by 20 percent and eliminate almost half of the gap to the food poverty line. Government plans to extend the program nationwide over the coming years as delivery capacity is built up.

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7. Political and business environment. Zambias score in the World Banks Doing Business Indicators has improved over the past decade, largely due to improvements in the ease of getting credit and enforcing contracts (Appendix I). Policymakers, however, have at times taken measures adding to costs of doing business and raising uncertainty about the policy direction. The government banned, in mid-2012, the use of foreign exchange in domestic contracts (creating problems for some externally-funded businesses, although these were reduced by a later exclusion of electricity projects from the ban); BOZ introduced caps on lending rates early this year; and the authorities recently adopted a new regulation to strengthen monitoring of foreign exchange transactions (adding to business costs, albeit limited by subsequent revisions of the regulation). 8. Medium-term outlook. The Zambian economy has high growth potential, with its substantial mineral wealth and largely untapped resources in agriculture, hydropower, and tourism. In light of the significant policy uncertainties, however, the medium-term outlook for growth and inflation is uncertain. Assuming front-loaded fiscal reforms leading to a medium-term deficit of 3 percent of GDP, and a business friendly policy environment, staff projects growth to remain at 7 8 percent and inflation to decline gradually to 5 percent. The proposed fiscal adjustment together with increased copper production and non-copper exports would improve the current account to roughly balance by 2018. 9. Risks. The balance of risks to growth is on the downside due to the uncertainties regarding the pace of fiscal adjustment and the investment climate. If the needed fiscal adjustment is delayed, the economy would be highly vulnerable to negative shocks, with low international reserves and rapidly rising public debt. In addition, the authorities might have difficulty mobilizing the needed deficit financing (Risk Assessment Matrix). Other risk factors include weather conditions, financial fallout from a reemergence of financial stress in the euro area, and trade and commodity price implications of a slowdown in emerging markets such as China. Greater exchange rate flexibility could help cushion against negative shocks, including disruptions to external financing and worsening of the terms of trade. 10. Authorities views. The authorities broadly shared staffs assessment of the economy and outlook. They noted that steps had already been taken to contain the fiscal deficit, including by removing the fuel subsidy, and that further strong action would be taken in 2014 and over the medium term. They also emphasized their commitment to maintaining a business friendly environment, noting that the recent steps to tighten regulation were needed to strengthen monitoring of the economy and had already revealed some suspicious business activities.

POLICIES GOING FORWARD


11. Government objectives. The governments Sixth National Development Plan aims to make Zambia a prosperous middle income country with an economic program leading to inclusive growth. Large public investment, particularly on roads and electricity, will lessen key constraints to economic development. Moreover, a rural focus will support pro-poor growth and an ambitious target for job creation has been established.

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12. Policy priorities. Preserving the economys hard won macroeconomic stability calls for a reduction of the fiscal deficit and increased international reserves. This will require mobilizing additional domestic revenue, realigning spending priorities, and creating fiscal space for infrastructure investment, while also maintaining a business environment that encourages job creation. At the same time, the targeted transformation of the Zambian economy requires fundamental administrative and institutional reforms to promote credible policy implementation, higher efficiency of public infrastructure investment, and deeper financial intermediation.

A. Fiscal Policy: Close the Financing Gaps and Realign Priorities


13. Developments in 2013. The fiscal deficit for 2013 is projected to reach 8.6 percent of GDP, assuming that the government implements planned fourth quarter spending cuts through reducing spending on goods and services (0.3 percent of GDP savings relative to the budget for the fourth quarter) and maintaining capital spending at least 0.5 percent of GDP below the annual budget. Virtually all categories of spending have deviated substantially from approved levels. The sharp increase in wages (45 percent, compared to the budgeted 9.1 percent),1 and the large overruns on subsidies4.0 percent of GDP, compared to a budget of less than 0.7 percentforced the government to make sharp cuts in goods and services, intergovernmental transfers, and capital spending. To finance the above-budget deficit, the authorities have increased issuance of Treasury bills, used part of the 2012 Eurobond proceeds that had earlier been transferred to SOEs for investments but had not yet been spent, and intend to borrow abroad via a syndicated loan. 14. There are risks that the fiscal deficit for 2013 will be higher than currently planned, if the authorities fail to implement the spending cuts discussed with the mission. This could lead to a substantial accumulation of arrears and/or reliance on central bank financing. In this regard, staff expressed concern about the recourse to central bank bridge loans, which are intended to assist with cash management but couldif not quickly repaidconstitute central bank financing of the budget. 15. The current fiscal stance is clearly unsustainable. Rating agencies have recently downgraded Zambias credit rating, citing sharply deteriorated government finances. Without a change in policies, government debt would rise in net present value from about 30 percent of GDP in 2013 to over 50 percent by 2018, with the debt financing predominantly recurrent expenditures.
PV of Debt-to-GDP Ratio
60 50 40 30 20 10 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Baseline Fixed-Primary Balance

Source: IMF staff estimates


1

The wage increases took effect September 1, so the full year effect will only be felt in 2014.

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16. Proposed fiscal adjustment over the medim term. Discussions on the 2014 budget took place before the authorities had finalized their plans. Staff advised addressing the fiscal gaps and creating space for spending on infrastructure, health, and education by taking measures to boost domestic revenue and contain the wage bill and other recurrent expenditures. Given the small size of the domestic financial market, in line with earlier staff advice, net domestic financing should not exceed 12 percent of GDP in the medium term, so as not to crowd out private sector credit. In addition, given limited debt management and project assessment and implementation capacities, as well as the limited availability of concessional financing, staff believes reliance on external financing should also be contained and gradually reduced. Thus, staff recommended reducing the fiscal deficit to 5 percent of GDP in 2014, in line with the MTEF approved by Cabinet in September, and gradually to 3 percent of GDP over the medium term. Given the recent fiscal slippages and to anchor the needed fiscal adjustment, staff stressed the importance of adopting, and then following, prudent budgets. Long-term fiscal anchor. Staff proposedand the authorities agreedthat fiscal policy should target a roughly unchanged debt to GDP ratio over the medium term. The proposed debt level is moderate but, considering the limited absorptive and debt management capacities, debt-financed additional spending is not recommended to maintain macroeconomic stability. To finance the needed investment in infrastructure, revenue measures are needed in addition to external borrowing. Moreover, maintaining fiscal space will be important given the economys dependence on copper and its volatile prices. In light of the expected increases in mining revenue over the medium term, the authorities will need to consider the implications of possible revenue volatility in conducting macroeconomic policy as well as the benefits of introducing a fiscal rule over the medium term. Staff Medium-Term Recommendations: Revenue Revenue measures. Staff Measures encouraged the authorities to accelerate revenue mobilization and cautioned against any narrowing of the tax base. Staff proposed revenue measures of about 2.3 percent of GDP over the medium term through broadening the tax base (text box), based on the recommendations of the recent FAD tax policy mission. The authorities need to continue strengthening mining tax administration. Staff advised against raising the PIT tax free threshold, which the authorities were considering, noting that the threshold is already high at 3 times GNI per capita. The proposed tax measures together with rising mining revenue and improved non-tax revenue collection are expected to raise revenues by 5 percent of GDP over the medium term.

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Rationalize the wage bill, which is projected to be 54 percent of domestic revenue in 2014. To mitigate this years large wage increase, staff supported the governments plan to freeze wages in 2014 and 2015 and net recruitment in 2014, and further proposed reducing the wage bill to not more than 35 percent of domestic revenue over the medium term and eventually to not more than 8 percent of GDP. To achieve the medium term target will require very tight wage policy through at least 2016. To enhance budget predictability and contain the wage bill, multi-year wage agreements (for the period after 2015)2 and civil service reforms will be needed, including a review of staffing levels (Appendix III). In this context, the government has embarked on a multi-year civil service reform program that aims to strengthen the efficiency of the public sector by, among other things, introducing a performance management system, rationalizing the pay scale, and streamlining allowances. Fuel subsidies. Staff welcomed the removal of fuel subsidies and stressed the importance of adopting an automatic pricing mechanism to avoid the recurrence of subsidies and to attract much needed investments in the area. Maize marketing and fertilizer subsidies. Staff supported the authorities decision to reduce fertilizer subsidies and fully reflect the Food Reserve Agencys (FRA) operations in the budget, and urged them to stick to the announced policy of limiting FRA activities to maintaining a modest strategic reserve. Additional reforms to support a larger role for the private sector, including the elimination of export bans, could help boost agricultural output and rural development more generally. Pension system. The Public Service Pension Fund (PSPF) has accumulated pension arrears of an estimated 1.1 percent of GDP, and its annual funding is insufficient to prevent the accumulation of new arrears. Staff supported the governments intention to reform the system (Box 2), including through increasing the retirement age to 65 from 55 years.

In addition, staff strongly supports the proposal to move wage negotiations with civil servants to before, rather than after, budget approval.

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Box 2. Pension Reform


The public pension system in Zambia is complicated by the presence of three different schemes: i) the National Pension Scheme Authority (NAPSA), to which all new entrants to the formal sector since 2000 are mandated to contribute, ii) The PSPF for central government workers, and iii) The Local Authorities Superannuation Fund (LASF) for subnational government and public utility workers. The PSPF and LASF have been closed to new entrants since 2000. Moreover, pensions for all three funds are based on ultimately unsustainable benefit rules. And the PSPF and LASF have been running large deficits. The central government has been partially financing the deficit of the PSPF to slow down the pace of arrears accumulation, but the stock of PSPF arrears to pensioners are nevertheless expected to reach 1.1 percent of GDP by end-2013. Supported by the finding of an FAD TA mission, staff recommended near- and medium-term measures to strengthen the sustainability of the pension systems including: i) transferring members of PSPF and LASF to NAPSA, which is currently in surplus, under a dual-benefit system, ii) raising the statutory retirement age from 55 to 65 gradually, (iii) reducing the current bias towards lump sum payments by lowering the commutation rate, introducing penalties for early retirement, and indexing benefits to inflation, (iv) raising the contribution rates of PSPF and LASF workers to the NAPSA rate of 10 percent, (v) strengthening collection capacity within NAPSA. The authorities have announced their intention to put the public pension system on a sustainable footing, including by raising the retirement age to 65. However, the full details and timing of the reform are not yet available.

Capital spending and financing. Staff recommended a more gradual path of increase in capital spending, in light of capacity constraints, and limiting external borrowing for capital projects to what is needed each year rather than issuing a Eurobond adequate to cover the full cost of multi-year investment projects. In the case of the latter, the government must bear additional interest costs, and there will be a risk that the funds will be diverted to lower priority spending.

17. Proposed 2014 budget. Staff stressed that the proposed 2014 budget does not take sufficient steps to start addressing the large fiscal deficit. The budget submitted to Parliament in October calls for a deficit of 6.2 percent of GDP in 2014, above staffs recommendation of 5 percent. The budget aims to increase domestic revenue by about 1.3 percent of GDP, mainly through nontax measures (including bringing revenue from FRA and other government agencies on budget, raising road tolls, and introducing a surcharge on money transfers). Contrary to staffs advice, the budget proposes raising the PIT tax-free threshold to K3,000 from the current 2,200, which will generate a revenue loss of about 1 percent of GDP.3 The budget also proposes a wage freeze for 2014
Under the new PIT tax-free threshold, only about 33 percent of employees in the formal sector are expected to pay income taxes.
3

10

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and 2015, as well as a net recruitment freeze for 2014 and limits FRA activities to maintaining a strategic reserve. 18. In addition to the higher than desirable planned deficit, there are substantial downside risks to the proposed 2014 budget. Based on available information, staff estimates that revenue and spending policies in the budget would produce a deficit of 7.4 percent of GDP, about 1 percent of GDP higher than budgeted.4 Moreover, the proposed wage and hiring freezes will be difficult to achieve given opposition from unions. Even modest increases in wages and new recruitments could incur additional Staff Recommendations: Fiscal Measures Additional to spending of 1 the 2014 Proposed Budget 1 percent of GDP. To Gain in Deficit Reduction reduce the proposed Refrain from raising the tax-free theshold 1 percent of GDP deficit to 5 percent of Starting to raise CIT rates on low-taxed sectors 0.4 percent of GDP GDP, staff Postponing some infrastructure projections 0.4 percent of GDP Reducing intergovernmental transfers 0.3 percent of GDP recommended further 5 measures (text box). 19. Authorities views. The authorities reiterated their commitment to ensure that the fiscal deficit for 2013 does not go beyond 8.5 percent of GDP. They will cut low-priority spending as needed to meet the deficit projection. Regarding the risks to the 2014 budget, the authorities reaffirmed that the government will stick to the proposed wage and net recruitment freeze and that additional measures will be taken as needed to meet the 2014 deficit target. Starting next year, revenues and expenditures of FRA and other government agencies will be monitored by the Treasury. Across the public sector, steps are being taken to strengthen governance and accountability, including new measures to improve procurement of petroleum and fertilizer. 20. While the authorities have not finalized their medium-term fiscal plans, they broadly agreed with staffs recommendations to gradually reduce the deficit to 3 percent of GDP, net domestic financing to 12 percent of GDP, and the wage bill to not more than 35 percent of revenues.6 They did not fully agree with the long-term target of a wage bill less than 8 percent of GDP, noting that the need to hire teachers, health care workers, and agricultural extension workers may make this impossible. In addition, while the authorities agree it will be important to eventually develop a fiscal strategy to insulate the budget from volatile copper revenues, they do not see this
4

The deficit could be significantly higher if the increase in nontax revenue falls short of the authorities ambitious projections. The baseline in Tables 2 and 3 assumes a fiscal outcome in 2014 based on the authorities planned financing. Over the medium term the baseline assumes that the authorities arrive at their medium-term target of raising tax revenue by around 3 percent of GDP over 2014-18 through the measures recommended by staff, and that recurrent expenditures are contained to levels agreed upon during discussions with a gradual increase in capital spending. For this baseline to hold, the authorities would need to identify additional measures to arrive at their targeted deficit. The attached fiscal tables reflect these medium-term fiscal goals. As the authorities have not yet spelled out all policies required to meet these goals, the tables include a line for fiscal measures yet to be taken.

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

11

ZAMBIA

as an urgent need, in light of the fact that significant copper tax revenue remains some years in the future.

B. PFM: Step up Reforms to Support Fiscal Consolidation


21. Developments. The recent PEFA assessment found a deterioration in PFM, including reporting and quality control. Procurement practices have also deteriorated, with single-source contracts for some large projects. While the rollout of the Integrated Financial Management Information System (IFMIS) has continued, its implementation, as well as that of the Treasury Single Account (TSA), has been weak, and only release-based fiscal data are available. In addition, consolidation of financing data with the BOZ needs to be improved. 22. Staff stressed the importance of stepping up PFM reform to support fiscal consolidation and improve budget planning and implementation. Staff underlined the importance of (i) enhancing budget credibility and consistency between the National Development Plan, Medium-Term Expenditure Framework, and annual budget; (ii) improving fiscal data as well as forecasts by enhancing the macro fiscal framework; (iii) expanding the coverage of the TSA by closing line ministries accounts at commercial banks; (iv) improving collaboration between units at the Ministry of Finance, and with the BOZ, to produce fiscal data based on expenditures rather than releases; (v) strengthening IFMIS implementation and controls; and (vi) providing additional resources to the Accountant Generals Department to support these reforms. 23. Authorities views. The authorities agreed with the need to improve cash management and improve collaboration across ministry units and with the BOZ. They noted that, with TA from donors, they will be refocusing efforts in this area and have recently adopted a new PFM reform strategy. Progress has been slow in implementing the multi-donor funded Public Expenditure Management and Accountability (PEMFA) program prepared in 2010. They indicated that the recommendations of the November 2013 FAD mission will be used to further develop the reform program, including prioritization and sequencing, and will inform further strategic discussions with donors on support for PFM reform.
Infrastructure and government spending

C. Improve Investment
Infrastructure Index 1/

5 South Africa 4 Zambia


(2009-2011 Average)

5 Rwanda 4 Ghana Uganda Nigeria Ethiopia Tanzania Mozambique Angola 3 2 1 0 0 5 10 15 Government capital expenditure in percent of GDP (2006-2011 Average) 20

Planning and Maintain Debt Sustainability


24. Developments. Given infrastructure needs, the government is ramping up capital spending on roads, railways, and power over the medium term. With limited donor support, Zambia has begun tapping the Eurobond market to

3 2 1 0

Sources: World Economic Forum; WEO; and IMF staff calculations.

12

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finance needed infrastructure.7 Selected municipalities and SOEs have proposed issuing sub-national Eurobonds totaling $4.5 billion (over 20 percent of 2012 GDP). Such issuances would likely require government guarantees. 25. Staff supported the Ministers opposition to the proposed sub-national Eurobonds, and advised that, to the extent these projects are of national importance, it would be preferable to issue sovereign bonds, which should be budgeted and on lent to sub-national entities with proper monitoring. Any such borrowing should also be in line with (i) macroeconomic stability and fiscal/debt sustainability; (ii) project appraisal, management and monitoring capacity; and (iii) debt management capacity and strategy. In this regard, staff encouraged the authorities to request a voluntary update of the Debt Management Performance Assessment (DEMPA) conducted in 2011, as well as to request TA from the World Bank to assist in finalizing their medium-term debt strategy. 26. Debt sustainability analysis (DSA). Zambias external and public debt remains relatively low, and an updated DSA based on the authorities planned fiscal adjustment scenario continues to indicate a low risk of debt stress, despite higher borrowing envisaged than in the previous DSA (Attachment). Absent adjustment, however, the debt ratio would rise sharply, with the fixed primary fiscal balance scenario demonstrating clearly the need for fiscal adjustment. 27. Authorities views. The authorities broadly agreed with staffs recommendations on the proposed sub-national Eurobonds as well as with the DSA results. They indicated that, to strengthen debt management, the International Debt Management Department will be restructured in tandem with a restructuring of the Ministry of Finance and stressed that Zambia will not fall into another debt trap, after receiving large debt relief in the 2000s.

D. Monetary Policy: Ensure Flexibility to Maintain Macroeconomic Stability


28. Developments. Inflation has in recent months remained at around 7 percent, above the BOZs end-2013 target of 6 percent, reflecting the removal of fuel subsidies, and inflationary pressure is expected to rise due to the large civil servant wage increases and reduction of maize subsidies.8 Following the elimination of fuel and maize subsidies, the BOZ increased the policy rate twice (25 bps each time) to 9.75 percent to contain inflationary pressure.9 Bank liquidity has been highly volatile. The BOZ has been under political pressure to lower lending rates and strengthen the kwacha.

Zambias maiden sovereign bond issue in September 2012 was a 10-year dollar-denominated bond, in the amount of $750m (initially $500 million). Orders for the offer amounted to some $12 billion, allowing the country to price the bond at a yield of just 5.625 percent. Food comprises 53 percent of Zambias consumer price index basket so the BOZ uses headline inflation as its inflation target while monitoring food and non-food inflation developments. The policy rate was introduced in April 2012 to replace reserve money targeting as BOZs main monetary policy tool.
9 8

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29. Monetary policy framework. Staff welcomed the progress that the BOZ has made in transitioning from conducting monetary policy through targeting reserve money to conducting policy through the policy rate. However, more needs to be done, including strengthening understanding of the interest rate transmission mechanism, improving liquidity forecasting and management, and developing high frequency indicators of economic activity. Pending further progress in these areas, staff supported Policy Rate and Overnight Interbank Rate (In percent) the BOZs intention to increasingly 13.0 Simple Average Overnight Rate Corridor - low conduct monetary policy through the 12.0 Corridor-high Policy rate policy rate, while nonetheless seeking to 11.0 keep reserve money and bank liquidity in 10.0 9.0 check. Staff encouraged the BOZ to 8.0 narrow the 400 basis point corridor in 7.0 which the BOZ targets the interbank rate 6.0 to strengthen the policy rates role as a 5.0 benchmark for the pricing of longer-term Apr-12 Jul-12 Oct-12 Jan-13 Apr-13 Jul-13 and customer transactions. Source: Bank of Zambia. 30. Monetary policy stance. The significant fiscal policy changes this year greatly complicate the BOZs task of controlling inflation. Staff supported the authorities intention to implicitly increase their inflation target for end-2013 to 7.5 percent to accommodate the first round effects of the removal of fuel and maize subsidies (estimated at 1 1 percentage points). Staff emphasized the importance of continuing to tighten monetary policy, in order to resist the second round effects of the removal of subsidies and the inflationary pressure from the large civil servant wage increases. 31. International reserves and exchange rates. The BOZ has started building up reserves slowly as the kwacha had appreciated in recent months, after losing reserves rapidly early this year during a brief (now ended) period of providing foreign exchange to finance oil imports. Given the economys vulnerability to negative shocks and the current low level of reserves (an estimate of 2.3
Consumer Prices (year-on-year percent change)
20 Petroleum Products Food 15 Other Non-Food Overall

10

-5 Jan-11 Jul-11 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Source: Zambian authorities.

International Reserves
(US$ Millions) 3,000

International reserves 1/ Kwacha per US$, rhs

6.0

5.5

2,500 5.0 2,000 4.5

1,500

4.0

Jan-11

Jan-12

Jan-13

Jul-11

Jul-12

Mar-11

Mar-12

Mar-13

May-11

May-12

May-13

Jul-13

Nov-11

Nov-12

Source: Bank of Zambia. 1/ Unencumbered reserves only.

14

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

Nov-13

Sep-11

Sep-12

Sep-13

ZAMBIA

months of imports for 2013), staff advised the BOZ to allow more exchange rate flexibility and to continue to build up reserves in line with their medium-term target of 4 months of imports, using reserves to offset temporary exchange rate movements, but not to resist sustained depreciation pressures when they exist. Staff analysis suggested that the kwacha remains broadly in line with fundamentals (Appendix IV). 32. Exchange restrictions. The authorities amended the BOZ Act and introduced new foreign exchange market regulations to strengthen monitoring of external transactions. LEG had judged that the initial version of the regulation on foreign exchange transactions violated Article VIII of the IMFs Articles of Agreement: On June 25, 2013, the Zambian authorities issued Statutory Instrument 55 of 2013, which regulates the monitoring of foreign exchange transactions and includes two measures that give rise to exchange restrictions subject to Fund approval under Article VIII, Section 2(a). The first exchange restriction arises from the requirement that a person making payments of dividends in foreign exchange provide a tax clearance certificate and evidence of payment of corporate or income tax. The second exchange restriction arises from the requirement that payments for royalties, management fees, technical fees, commissions or consultancy fees in foreign exchange be accompanied by evidence of corporate tax payments. Both measures give rise to exchange restrictions subject to IMF approval under Article VIII, Section 2(a) because they impose limitations on the availability of foreign exchange for the making of payments of current international transactions based on noncompliance with obligations that are unrelated to the proposed transaction.

33. The authorities have been working closely with the Fund staff to eliminate the exchange restrictions in the regulation, while maintaining their goal of strengthened monitoring. It is expected that the authorities will amend the regulation to be compliant with Article VIII before the Board meeting. 34. Authorities views. The BOZ acknowledged that moving to a policy rate-based regime is a transitional process. They noted that, utilizing the ongoing Norway/MCM TA, the BOZ will continue to develop all the structures necessary for the effective functioning of the policy rate as the main monetary policy tool. To improve liquidity forecasting, the BOZ plans to work together with the government to enhance the flow of information on government transactions. The BOZ stressed that to avoid a wage-price spiral, they are prepared to act to offset inflationary pressures from the large civil service wage increase, and noted the recent increase in BOZs budget for open market operations. The authorities agreed with the exchange rate assessment and acknowledged the need to further build up international reserves, but noted that they are reluctant to do so when the kwacha is depreciating.

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E. Financial Sector: Address Structural Constraints


35. Background. The authorities are concerned about high lending rates and limited access to credit by SMEs, which prompted the introduction of caps on lending rates (Appendix V).10 The banking system is highly concentrated, with the top four banks assets amounting to about 60 percent of total banking sector assets. The banking systems loan-to-deposit ratio is low at around 65 percent, indicating that the lack of bankable projects and borrowers is the main reason for limited credit delivery. The overall framework and practices for banking supervision are broadly compliant with the Basel Core Principles (Financial Sector Assessment Program Update, 2009). 36. Lending rate ceilings. Staff noted Treasury Bill Rates and Lending Rate Ceilings that international experience shows that (percent) 19 19 lending rate ceilingsif they are binding will distort credit allocation and restrict 17 17 T/B: 364 days BoZ policy rate (rather than enhance) access to credit, 15 15 T/B: 182 days Lending rate ceiling for banks particularly for SMEs. Since the lending rate 13 13 ceilings were introduced early this year, market interest rates (as reflected in average 11 11 Treasury bill rates) have increased more than 9 9 two percentage points, while the ceilings have been increased only one 7 7 Apr-12 Jul-12 Oct-12 Jan-13 Apr-13 Jul-13 Oct-13 half percentage point, making them Source: Bank of Zambia. increasingly binding. Staff advised that to reduce interest rates, efforts should focus on reforms to enhance competition in the banking sector, and help SMEs develop credible business plans. If the authorities are determined to maintain the lending rate ceilings, at the very least it will be important to adjust them in line with market rate increases. One way to achieve this would be to tie the ceiling to the average Treasury bill rate, rather than to the policy rate. 37. Financial inclusion. Staff welcomed the authorities continued efforts to enhance financial services delivery by strengthening the Credit Zambia: Number of Bank Branches and Agencies Reference Bureau, expanding bank branches 350 in rural areas, and improving credit culture. Whole country 300 The planned introduction of a unified Lusaka 250 collateral registry system, agency banking 200 guidelines, and steps to improve land titling 150 will facilitate credit provision and improve 100 access to financial services particularly in 50 0 rural areas. Staff noted that, combined, 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 these measures are more likely to June
Source: Bank of Zambia.

The interest rate caps were initially set at 18.25 percent for banks, 30 percent for non-banks, and 42 percent for microfinance institutions, with the levels tied to the BoZ policy rate.

10

16

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ZAMBIA

contribute to a reduced cost of loans for SMEs than the lending rate cap. 38. Banks new capital requirement. To strengthen the balance sheets of banks, the authorities increased the minimum capital requirement.11 All but a few small banks are expected to meet the new requirements by the end of 2013. Given the rapid increase in private sector credit in the second half of 2012 and the new higher bank capital, staff supported the BOZs intensive banking supervision to assess a potential build-up in vulnerability and risks to financial stability. 39. Authorities views. The authorities noted that private sector credit has continued to increase since the introduction of the lending rate ceilings and that the nonbank sector is being restructured, including by marginal and inefficient nonbanks exit from the market. They indicated that BOZ is carefully monitoring developments in bank and nonbank lending, and has also asked a foreign consultant to conduct an in-depth study of the impact of the lending rate ceilings. The authorities noted financial inclusion as a policy priority. Given limited financial system infrastructure in Zambia, agent banking is being pursued as a low cost solution, particularly in rural areas.

F. Boosting Competitiveness and Inclusive Growth


40. Background. Over the last decade, Zambias competitiveness has been boosted by strengthened macroeconomic fundamentals and a supportive business environment. Zambias business environment remains favorable compared to other countries in the region, but weaknesses in infrastructure and human capital as well as the recently more interventionist regulatory approach and related uncertainty about the policy direction are impediments to continued progress. Moreover, while non-copper exports have increased rapidly in recent years, the country remains reliant on copper exports. To secure continued growth and diversification, Zambia will need to boost infrastructure and Minimum Wages education, while maintaining a business (2012/13 and private sector unless otherwise noted) 500 friendly environment that inspires investor 450 Zambia (public sector confidence 400 from September, 2013)
Minimum Wage over GDP per Capita

41. Minimum wages. A sharp increase in 2012 brought the minimum wage in Zambia to about 1 times per capita GDP. The private sector and NGOs noted that the high minimum wage is hampering the countrys competitiveness and formal employment.12 Moreover,
11

350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 0


Malawi Tanzania Mozambique Kenya Zambia Zambia (2011) Indonesia &Vietnam China

Cambodia Senegal Bangladesh

2000

4000 Minimum Wage in US$

6000

8000

Sources: U.S. Department of Labor and WageIndicators.org.

The capital requirement was increased in 2012 from $2.4 million to $20 million for locally owned banks and to $100 million for foreign-owned banks, but banks have been given to end-2013 to meet the new requirement.
12

The minimum wage law applies to the formal private sector, and sets different minimums for different job categories, including domestics, shopkeepers, and general workers. In the public sector, the lowest wage paid is much higher than specified in the minimum wage law.

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

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ZAMBIA

some in government are considering pressuring private companies to match the new government minimum wage, which is roughly 4 times per capita GDP and 2 times the current minimum wage in the private sector. Minimum wages of this magnitude would inhibit job creation by driving many employers out of business and resulting in a sharp decline in both domestic and foreign investments. It could also lead to further reliance on informal sector jobs, where workers have less protection. 42. Authorities views. The authorities stressed that the government is ramping up capital spending on infrastructure to address key impediments to inclusive growth and competitiveness. They noted that the 2012 increase in the statutory minimum wage had been overdue as it had not been adjusted between 2006 and 2011, but also that views by some officials on extending the new government minimum to the private sector or introducing sector-based differentiation were their personal views, not the governments.

G. Strengthening Statistics
43. While data provision needs improvement, especially on balance of payments and fiscal reporting, data are broadly adequate for surveillance. Efforts are ongoing to improve national accounts data with plans to rebase to 2010 by next year. However, gaps in balance of payments data remain in several areas including reinvested exporter earnings, trade in services, and the financial account (Informational Annex). Fiscal data is not robust due to weak data consolidation and limited classification harmonization across government institutions and the BOZ. Staff welcomed the authorities continued efforts to improve data quality and availability and recommended a data ROSC to fully assess Zambias data situation.

STAFF APPRAISAL
44. The Zambian economy has performed well in recent years, with strong growth and modest inflation, and has high growth potential. The government has resolved to step up development by scaling up investment in infrastructure. However, this year has seen a substantial loosening of fiscal policy, leading to a large fiscal deficit. 45. The current fiscal stance is unsustainable. To address risks of large arrears accumulations and additional central bank financing in 2013, it will be important for the authorities to adhere to their plans to reduce low-priority investment spending, and contain goods and services spending. Staff recommends firmly addressing the fiscal slippages in 2014 and continuing to reduce fiscal deficits over the medium term. Medium-term reforms are required to contain the wage bill and recurrent expenditure, boost domestic revenue, and create fiscal space for infrastructure investment. Staff recommends reducing the fiscal deficit to 5 percent of GDP in 2014 and gradually to 3 percent of GDP over the medium term, and bringing down net domestic financing to 12 percent of GDP a year to avoid crowding out the private sector.

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46. The proposed 2014 budget does not take sufficient steps to begin addressing the large fiscal deficit. Staff estimates that the spending and revenue policies in the budget will produce a deficit of at least 7.4 percent of GDP, much higher than the recommended 5 percent. Staff cautions against the proposed increase in the tax-free threshold on personal income tax, which would further reduce the already narrow tax base. The government should take stronger revenue measures than budgeted and stick to the proposed wage and recruitment freezes, to contain the already excessive wage bill. Staff welcomes the governments decision to remove fuel and maize subsidies, to limit FRA activities to maintaining a strategic reserve, and to fully reflect FRA revenue and expenditure in the budget. 47. Public financial management reform needs to be stepped up to support fiscal consolidation. Staff welcomes the authorities stated commitment to working with its partners to strengthen PFM, and urges the authorities to attach high priority to these efforts, especially on fiscal reporting and budgetary controls. 48. The progress made in transitioning to conducting monetary policy through the policy rate is welcome. However, more needs to be done, including strengthening understanding of the interest rate transmission mechanism, improving liquidity forecasting and management, and developing high frequency indicators of economic activity. Pending further progress in these areas, staff supports the BOZs intention to increasingly conduct monetary policy through the policy rate, while nonetheless seeking to keep reserve money and bank liquidity in check. 49. The BOZ needs to continue tightening monetary policy. The significant fiscal policy changes this year complicate the BOZs task of controlling inflation. Staff supports the authorities intention to increase their inflation target to accommodate the first round effects of the removal of fuel and maize subsidies. However, tighter monetary policy is needed to resist second round effects of the removal of subsidies and inflationary pressure from the large civil servant wage increases. Given the current low level of reserves, staff advises the BOZ to allow more exchange rate flexibility and continue to build up reserves in line with their medium-term target in order to limit the economys vulnerability to negative shocks. 50. Staff supports the authorities efforts to strengthen the financial sector and improve access to financial services. Staff recommends the elimination of the lending rate ceilings introduced early this year, which restrict access to credit, particularly for SMEs, and are becoming increasingly binding, or, at a minimum, tying the lending rate ceiling to the Treasury bill rate. To reduce lending rates, efforts should instead focus on reforms to enhance competition in the banking sector and address high business costs. The planned introduction of a unified collateral registry system, agency banking guidelines, and steps to improve land titling will facilitate credit provision and improve access to financial services particularly in rural areas. 51. Maintaining a good business environment is important for strong growth and economic diversification. Over the last decade, Zambias competitiveness has been boosted by strengthened macroeconomic fundamentals and a favorable business environment. However, regulatory changes in a number of areas have raised costs of doing business and created

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

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ZAMBIA

uncertainty about the policy direction. Moreover, wage increases that outstrip productivity would hamper the countrys competitiveness and job creation. Staff strongly advises against pressuring private sector employers to match the governments new minimum wage, as this would significantly undermine competitiveness. 52. Staff recommends that the next Article IV consultation be held on the standard 12-month cycle.

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Table 1. Zambia: Selected Economic Indicators, 201118


2011 Baseline Scenario 2012 Actual 2013 2014 2015 Proj. 2016 2017 2018

(Percentage Change) National account and prices GDP growth at constant prices Mining Non mining GDP deflator GDP at market prices (millions of kwacha) Consumer prices Consumer prices (average) Consumer prices (end of period) External sector Terms of trade (deterioration -) Average exchange rate (kwacha per U.S. dollar) (percentage change; depreciation -) Real effective exchange rate (depreciation -)1 Money and credit (end of period, unless otherwise specified) Domestic credit to the private sector Reserve money (end of period) Broad Money (M3) 6.8 -5.2 8.2 12.5 93,344 7.2 -2.7 8.2 5.9 105,983 6.0 12.0 5.5 7.6 120,952 7.3 13.2 6.7 7.2 139,113 7.5 8.2 7.4 5.9 158,275 7.6 7.5 7.6 5.1 178,864 7.6 7.0 7.7 5.0 202,101 7.7 7.0 7.7 5.0 228,462

8.7 7.2

6.6 7.3

7.1 7.5

7.0 6.5

6.0 5.5

5.2 5.0

5.0 5.0

5.0 5.0

4.4 4.861 -1.3 -2.6

-12.5 5.147 -5.9 3.3

-3.9

1.4

-0.8

-1.0

-1.3

-1.1

28.2 6.8 21.7

37.0 51.4 17.9

10.0 -9.6 18.2

18.0 18.0 19.6

18.2 18.0 19.9

20.4 18.1 19.9

20.6 17.5 20.0

20.7 17.7 20.3

(Percent of GDP; unless otherwise indicated) National accounts Gross investment Government Private National savings Net lending(+)/net borrowing(-) Central government budget Revenue Taxes Grants Other revenue Expenditure Expense Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets Fiscal Measures Net lending/borrowing 2 Excluding grants Net acquisition of financial assets Domestic Foreign Net incurrance of liabilities Domestic Foreign External sector Current account balance (excluding grants) Gross International Reserves (months of prospective imports) Excluding FDI-financed imports Public debt Total central government debt, net (end-period) External Stock of domestic debt, net Memorandum item: Gross national income per capita (US$) 23.5 4.2 19.3 27.1 3.7 24.8 6.5 18.3 24.9 0.1 24.8 6.6 18.1 23.4 -1.3 25.2 7.2 18.0 24.5 -0.6 25.9 7.7 18.2 25.5 -0.4 26.7 8.3 18.4 26.5 -0.2 27.0 8.4 18.6 27.0 0.0 27.5 8.6 18.9 27.6 0.1

21.7 19.3 0.8 1.6 23.9 19.7 4.2 -1.2 -2.0 2.4 2.4 0.0 3.6 2.4 1.2

22.7 18.2 1.7 2.9 26.0 19.6 6.5 -2.7 -4.4 2.0 2.0 0.0 4.7 1.1 3.7

20.9 17.2 1.0 2.7 29.5 22.9 6.6 0.0 -8.6 -9.6 -1.5 -1.5 0.0 6.4 4.8 1.7

22.0 16.9 1.4 3.7 29.4 22.2 7.2 1.1 -6.3 -7.8 0.7 0.7 0.0 7.0 2.0 5.0

22.5 17.6 1.3 3.6 28.9 21.2 7.7 0.7 -5.7 -7.0 0.2 0.2 0.0 5.9 2.4 3.5

23.1 18.3 1.2 3.6 28.8 20.6 8.3 0.6 -5.2 -6.4 0.2 0.2 0.0 5.4 2.2 3.2

23.8 19.3 1.0 3.5 28.9 20.4 8.4 0.9 -4.2 -5.2 0.4 0.3 0.1 4.6 1.7 2.8

24.8 20.2 0.8 3.7 28.8 20.2 8.6 1.0 -3.0 -3.9 0.4 0.3 0.1 3.4 1.3 2.1

3.7 2.9 2.8 3.3

0.1 -0.6 2.7 3.1

-1.3 -2.0 2.3 2.6

-0.6 -1.6 2.5 2.8

-0.4 -1.1 2.8 3.2

-0.2 -0.9 3.1 3.5

0.0 -0.6 3.4 3.8

0.1 -0.4 3.8 4.2

20.1 10.2 9.8 1,408

24.2 16.3 7.9 1,463

30.3 16.5 13.8

33.0 19.7 13.3

34.9 21.0 13.9

36.2 21.8 14.3

36.5 22.3 14.2

35.6 22.0 13.6

Sources: Zambian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.


1
2

Excludes Zimbabwe. Including discrepancy between the above-the-line balance and below-the-line financing.

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ZAMBIA

Table 2. Zambia: Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 201118


(Millions of kwacha)
2011 2012 Prel. 2013 Budget Baseline 2014 Staff Rec. Budget Baseline 2015 Baseline 2016 Baseline 2017 Baseline 2018 Baseline

Revenue Tax Income taxes Value-added tax Excise taxes Customs duties Grants Budget support Project grants Other revenue1 Of which: Mineral Royalty Memorandum item : ZRA Revenues (Tax + Mineral Royalty) Expenditure Expense Compensation of employees Use of goods and services 2 Interest Domestic Foreign Subsidies Fertilizer support program Strategic Food Reserve (FRA) Fuel Intergovernmental transfers Social benefits Other 3 Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets Of which: non-donor financed Gross Operating Balance Fiscal Measures Statistical Discrepancy (-overfinancing)4 Net lending/borrowing Excluding grants Financing Net acquisition of financial assets Domestic Currency and deposits 5 Loans Equity and investment fund shares Foreign Net incurrence of liabilities Domestic Debt securities BOZ recapitalization Loans Foreign Loans Budget support, gross Project loans, gross Other, gross Amortization Debt securities Arrears financing Memorandum items: Net Domestic Financing 5 Excluding Eurobond proceeds Overall balance, excl. budget grants and mining revenue Primary balance Primary balance, excluding mining revenue Mining revenue Stock of domestic debt, gross Stock of external debt, net
1 2 3 4 5

20,233 18,018 10,655 3,973 1,665 1,725 714 602 112 1,501 868 18,886 22,267 18,364 7,402 4,480 1,082 1,013 69 2,837 895 1,674 268 1,392 977 195 3,902 3,843 1,869 925 -1,109 -1,823 -1,109 2,246 2,246 2,127 0 119 0 3,355 2,221 2,746 -525 1,134 1,134 1,234 0 0 -99

24,099 19,260 10,275 4,743 2,201 2,041 1,796 755 1,041 3,042 1,459 20,719 27,600 20,753 9,393 4,640 1,737 1,636 101 1,894 840 300 754 1,729 874 486 6,847 4,957 3,346 640 -2,861 -4,657 -2,861 2,143 2,143 2,040 0 102 0 5,003 1,115 1,262 -147 3,888 28 270 971 0 -1,212 3,860

26,271 21,613 10,887 6,016 2,596 2,114 1,525 599 926 3,132 1,922 23,535 31,211 22,544 11,051 5,205 2,014 1,521 493 800 500 300 0 2,710 765 0 8,667 7,051 3,727 -4,940 -6,465

25,313 20,822 9,962 6,210 2,542 2,108 1,185 599 586 3,306 2,037 22,860 35,690 27,660 11,826 4,865 2,231 1,741 490 4,850 1,027 2,329 1,494 2,423 1,465 0 8,030 6,562 -2,346 0 -10,376 -11,561 -10,376 -1,865 -1,865 -2,625 0 760 0 7,775 5,751 3,596 390 1,765 2,024 2,024 120 1,237 1,339 -673 0 736

32,816 25,695 12,505 7,480 3,222 2,488 2,198 550 1,648 4,923 2,557 28,252 39,897 30,477 15,408 5,989 3,649 2,683 966 1,513 500 1,013 0 2,869 1,049 0 9,420 7,073 2,339 0

31,614 24,457 10,781 8,099 3,247 2,331 2,076 533 1,543 5,081 2,186 26,643 40,206 30,466 15,497 5,777 3,277 2,250 1,026 1,513 500 1,013 0 3,386 1,016 0 9,740 7,695 1,148

30,574 23,466 10,627 7,225 3,263 2,351 1,984 415 1,569 5,125 2,590 26,056 40,868 30,837 15,497 5,777 3,652 2,686 966 1,513 500 1,013 0 3,381 1,016 0 10,032 7,695 -262 1496 -8,798 -10,782 -8,798 949 949 -130 0 1,079 0 9,748 2,772 3,502 -130 -600 6,976 1,532 0 1,776 0 -244 5,444

35,663 27,878 12,504 8,803 3,821 2,751 2,072 492 1,579 5,713 2,895 30,773 45,724 33,533 15,843 7,093 4,531 3,162 1,369 1,526 513 1,013 0 3,116 1,422 0 12,191 9,491 2,130 1038 -9,023 -11,095 -9,023 240 240 -130 0 370 0 9,263 3,734 4,464 -130 -600 5,529 1,198 268 1,855 0 -925 4,331

41,272 32,803 14,774 10,456 4,415 3,158 2,091 513 1,578 6,378 3,194 35,996 51,582 36,796 16,119 8,146 5,190 3,383 1,807 1,536 523 1,013 0 3,436 2,369 0 14,786 12,030 4,476 1033 -9,277 -11,368 -9,277 340 340 -130 0 470 0 9,617 3,908 4,038 -130 0 5,709 1,062 262 1,917 0 -1,116 4,647

48,085 39,039 18,003 12,290 5,141 3,606 1,950 522 1,427 7,097 3,498 42,537 58,307 41,326 17,771 9,456 6,034 3,733 2,301 1,545 532 1,013 0 3,843 2,677 0 16,981 14,230 6,759 1752 -8,471 -10,420 -8,471 821 531 0 0 531 290 9,291 3,533 3,533 0 5,759 1,256 265 2,003 0 -1,012 4,503

56,648 46,244 21,841 14,315 5,976 4,112 1,856 525 1,331 8,549 4,481 50,725 65,894 46,232 19,592 11,056 6,696 4,034 2,663 1,555 541 1,013 0 4,306 3,026 0 19,662 16,878 10,417 2300 -6,945 -8,801 -6,945 895 600 0 0 600 295 7,840 3,080 3,080 0 4,760 1,813 265 2,095 0 -548 2,947

-7,081 -8,592 -9,279 -10,668 -7,081 765 765 -130 0 895 0 7,846 2,875 4,205 -130 -1,200 4,971 610 224 1,776 0 -1,390 4,362 0 -8,592 1,079 1,079 0 0 1,079 0 9,671 2,902 3,502 0 -600 6,769 1,269 0 1,515 0 -246 5,500

94 -6,806 -27 -5,121 5,095 14,164 9,558

-925 -7,685 -1,124 -5,193 4,069 15,409 17,292

8,376 5,851 -14,580 -8,145 -11,750 3,605 21,347 19,953

3,005 2,902 2,975 3,002 -12,039 -13,544 -3,432 -5,315 -7,840 -9,734 4,408 4,419 24,803 23,146 27,647 25,957

2,902 2,872 -13,632 -5,146 -9,565 4,419 23,743 27,391

3,864 3,864 -14,506 -4,492 -9,482 4,990 27,123 33,189

4,038 4,038 -15,593 -4,087 -9,891 5,804 30,677 39,080

3,533 3,533 -15,850 -2,436 -9,294 6,857 33,865 45,136

3,080 3,080 -16,439 -249 -9,218 8,969 36,602 50,317

Sources: Zambian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections. Includes royalties paid by mining companies. Includes arrears payments for goods and services and other liability payments. Includes financial restructuring. The discrepancy largely reflects changes in the carryover of budgetary releases. Includes eurobond proceeds collected in 2012 to be spent in 2013.

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Table 3. Zambia: Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 201118


(Percent of GDP)
2011 2012 Prel. 2013 Baseline Staff Rec. 2014 Budget Baseline 2015 Baseline 2016 Baseline 2017 Baseline 2018 Baseline

Revenue Tax Income taxes Value-added tax Excise taxes Customs duties Grants Budget support Project grants Other revenue1 Expenditure Expense Compensation of employees Use of goods and services 2 Interest Domestic Foreign Subsidies Fertilizer support program Strategic Food Reserve (FRA) Fuel Intergovernmental transfers Social benefits Other 3 Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets Of which: non-donor financed Gross Operating Balance Fiscal Measures Statistical Discrepancy (-overfinancing)4 Net lending/borrowing Excluding grants Financing Net acquisition of financial assets Domestic Currency and deposits 5 Loans Equity and investment fund shares Foreign Net incurrence of liabilities Domestic Debt securities BOZ recapitalization Loans Foreign Loans Budget support, gross Project loans, gross Other, gross Amortization Debt securities Arrears financing Memorandum items: Net Domestic Financing 5 Excluding Eurobond proceeds Overall balance, excl. budget grants and mining revenue Primary balance Primary balance, excluding mining revenue Mining revenue Domestic arrears payments Stock of domestic debt, gross Stock of external debt, net Nominal GDP (millions of kwacha)
1 2 3 4 5

21.7 19.3 11.4 4.3 1.8 1.8 0.8 0.6 0.1 1.6 23.9 19.7 7.9 4.8 1.2 1.1 0.1 3.0 1.0 1.8 0.3 1.5 1.0 0.2 4.2 4.1 2.0 1.0 -1.2 -2.0 -1.2 2.4 2.4 2.3 0.0 0.1 0.0 3.6 2.4 2.9 -0.6 1.2 1.2 1.3 0.0 0.0 -0.1

22.7 18.2 9.7 4.5 2.1 1.9 1.7 0.7 1.0 2.9 26.0 19.6 8.9 4.4 1.6 1.5 0.1 1.8 0.8 0.3 0.7 1.6 0.8 0.5 6.5 4.7 3.2 0.6 -2.7 -4.4 -2.7 2.0 2.0 1.9 0.0 0.1 0.0 4.7 1.1 1.2 -0.1 3.7 0.0 0.3 0.9 0.0 -1.1 3.6

20.9 17.2 8.2 5.1 2.1 1.7 1.0 0.5 0.5 2.7 29.5 22.9 9.8 4.0 1.8 1.4 0.4 4.0 0.8 1.9 1.2 2.0 1.2 0.0 6.6 5.4 -1.9 0.0 -8.6 -9.6 -8.6 -1.5 -1.5 -2.2 0.0 0.6 0.0 6.4 4.8 3.0 0.3 1.5 1.7 1.7 0.1 1.0 1.1 -0.6 0.0 0.6

23.6 18.5 9.0 5.4 2.3 1.8 1.6 0.4 1.2 3.5 28.7 21.9 11.1 4.3 2.6 1.9 0.7 1.1 0.4 0.7 0.0 2.1 0.8 0.0 6.8 5.1 1.7 0.0 -5.1 -6.7 -5.1 0.5 0.5 -0.1 0.0 0.6 0.0 5.6 2.1 3.0 -0.1 -0.9 3.6 0.4 0.2 1.3 0.0 -1.0 3.1 0

22.7 17.6 7.7 5.8 2.3 1.7 1.5 0.4 1.1 3.7 28.9 21.9 11.1 4.2 2.4 1.6 0.7 1.1 0.4 0.7 0.0 2.4 0.7 0.0 7.0 5.5 0.8 -6.2 -7.7 -6.2 0.8 0.8 0.0 0.0 0.8 0.0 7.0 2.1 2.5 0.0 -0.4 4.9 0.9 0.0 1.1 0.0 -0.2 4.0

22.0 16.9 7.6 5.2 2.3 1.7 1.4 0.3 1.1 3.7 29.4 22.2 11.1 4.2 2.6 1.9 0.7 1.1 0.4 0.7 0.0 2.4 0.7 0.0 7.2 5.5 -0.2 1.1 -6.3 -7.8 -6.3 0.7 0.7 -0.1 0.0 0.8 0.0 7.0 2.0 2.5 -0.1 -0.4 5.0 1.1 0.0 1.3 0.0 -0.2 3.9

22.5 17.6 7.9 5.6 2.4 1.7 1.3 0.3 1.0 3.6 28.9 21.2 10.0 4.5 2.9 2.0 0.9 1.0 0.3 0.6 0.0 2.0 0.9 0.0 7.7 6.0 1.3 0.7 -5.7 -7.0 -5.7 0.2 0.2 -0.1 0.0 0.2 0.0 5.9 2.4 2.8 -0.1 -0.4 3.5 0.8 0.2 1.2 0.0 -0.6 2.7

23.1 18.3 8.3 5.8 2.5 1.8 1.2 0.3 0.9 3.6 28.8 20.6 9.0 4.6 2.9 1.9 1.0 0.9 0.3 0.6 0.0 1.9 1.3 0.0 8.3 6.7 2.5 0.6 -5.2 -6.4 -5.2 0.2 0.2 -0.1 0.0 0.3 0.0 5.4 2.2 3.2 0.6 0.1 1.1 0.0 -0.6 2.6

23.8 19.3 8.9 6.1 2.5 1.8 1.0 0.3 0.7 3.5 28.9 20.4 8.8 4.7 3.0 1.8 1.1 0.8 0.3 0.5 0.0 1.9 1.3 0.0 8.4 7.0 3.3 0.9 -4.2 -5.2 -4.2 0.4 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.1 4.6 1.7 2.8 0.6 0.1 1.0 0.0 -0.5 2.2

24.8 20.2 9.6 6.3 2.6 1.8 0.8 0.2 0.6 3.7 28.8 20.2 8.6 4.8 2.9 1.8 1.2 0.7 0.2 0.4 0.0 1.9 1.3 0.0 8.6 7.4 4.6 1.0 -3.0 -3.9 -3.0 0.4 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.1 3.4 1.3 2.1 0.8 0.1 0.9 0.0 -0.2 1.3

0.1 -7.3 0.0 -5.5 5.5 0.4 15.2 10.2 93,344

-0.9 -7.3 -1.1 -4.9 3.8 0.4 14.5 16.3 105,983

6.9 4.8 -12.1 -6.7 -9.7 3.0 0.5 17.6 16.5 120,952

2.2 2.1 -8.7 -2.5 -5.6 3.2 0.2 17.8 19.9 139,113

2.1 2.2 -9.7 -3.8 -7.0 3.2 0.3 16.6 18.7 139,113

2.1 2.1 -9.8 -3.7 -6.9 3.2 0.3 17.1 19.7 139,113

2.4 2.4 -9.2 -2.8 -6.0 3.2 0.2 17.1 21.0 158,275

2.3 2.3 -8.7 -2.3 -5.5 3.2 0.2 17.2 21.8 178,864

1.7 1.7 -7.8 -1.2 -4.6 3.4 0.2 16.8 22.3 202,101

1.3 1.3 -7.2 -0.1 -4.0 3.9 0.2 16.0 22.0 228,462

Sources: Zambian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections. Includes royalties paid by mining companies. Includes arrears payments for goods and services and other liability payments. Includes financial restructuring. The discrepancy largely reflects changes in the carryover of budgetary releases. Includes eurobond proceeds collected in 2012 to be spent in 2013.

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ZAMBIA

Table 4. Zambia: Monetary Account, 2011181


(Millions of kwacha, unless otherwise indicated)

2011 Baseline scenario Monetary survey Net foreign assets Net domestic assets Domestic claims Net claims on central government Claims on other sectors Claims on other financial corporations Claims on state and local government Claims on public non-financial corporations Claims on private sector Other items net Broad money (M3) Quasi money (M2) Foreign exchange deposits Monetary authorities Net foreign assets Asset Liabilities Of which: IMF liabilities Net domestic assets Net domestic claims Net claims on central government Claims on other sectors Other items (net) Reserve money Currency outside banks and cash in vaults Other depository corporation reserves Liabilities to other sectors Memorandum items: Reserve money (end-of-period, annual percent change Broad Money (M3) (annual percent change) Credit to the private sector (annual percent change) Velocity (nominal GDP/M3) Money multiplier (M3/reserve money) Credit to the private sector (percent of GDP) Gross foreign exchange reserves of the Bank of Zambia (millions of U.S. dollars) 2/ Exchange rate (kwacha per U.S. dollar, end period) 6,140 11,991 -5,851 -2,131 -609 -149 -218 38 -460 5,531 3,406 2,106 19 9,393 12,412 16,850 5,200 11,650 85 12 99 11,454 -4,438 21,805 14,298 7,507

2012 Actual

2013

2014

2015 Proj.

2016

2017

2018

12,014 13,685 19,727 3,242 16,485 78 19 694 15,695 -6,041 25,699 19,514 6,185

12,738 17,632 26,523 9,063 17,460 66 22 102 17,269 -8,891 30,370 22,832 7,539

15,075 21,237 30,765 10,195 20,569 66 22 102 20,379 -9,528 36,311 27,281 9,030

20,015 23,537 35,785 11,509 24,276 66 22 102 24,086 -12,248 43,551 32,701 10,851

24,817 27,381 42,076 12,882 29,194 66 22 102 29,004 -14,695 52,198 39,169 13,029

30,471 32,150 49,077 13,906 35,170 66 22 102 34,980 -16,927 62,621 46,961 15,660

37,642 37,702 57,212 14,800 42,412 66 22 102 42,222 -19,510 75,344 56,467 18,877

10,789 16,623 -5,834 -2,085 -2,415 -2,097 -2,151 29 -317 8,375 3,840 4,515 21

9,455 15,211 -5,757 -2,008 -1,886 -923 631 96 -963 7,569 4,334 3,207 27

11,482 17,059 -5,576 -1,827 -2,548 -1,585 776 96 -963 8,934 5,060 3,842 33

16,114 21,345 -5,232 -1,483 -5,575 -4,612 969 96 -963 10,539 5,922 4,578 39

20,607 25,442 -4,835 -1,086 -8,166 -7,203 1,171 96 -963 12,441 6,921 5,474 47

25,953 30,407 -4,454 -705 -11,339 -10,376 1,347 96 -963 14,613 8,090 6,467 57

32,815 36,919 -4,105 -356 -15,609 -14,646 1,501 96 -963 17,205 9,476 7,661 68

6.8 21.7 28.2 4.3 3.9 12.3 2,167 5.117

51.4 17.9 37.0 4.1 3.1 14.8 2,457 5.147

-9.6 18.2 10.0 4.0 4.0 14.3 2,368

18.0 19.6 18.0 3.8 4.1 14.6 2,871

18.0 19.9 18.2 3.6 4.1 15.2 3,704

18.1 19.9 20.4 3.4 4.2 16.2 4,500

17.5 20.0 20.6 3.2 4.3 17.3 5,465

17.7 20.3 20.7 3.0 4.4 18.5 6,730

Sources: Zambian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.


1 2

End of period. Unencumbered reserves only

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Table 5. Zambia: Balance of Payments, 2011181


(Millions of U.S. dollars, unless otherwise indicated)
2011 Baseline scenario Current account Trade balance Exports, f.o.b. Of which: copper Imports, f.o.b Services (net) Income (net) Of which: interest on public debt Current transfers (net) Budget support grants Sector-wide approach grants Private transfers Capital and financial account Capital account Project grants External debt cancellation Financial account Foreign direct and portfolio investments Other investments Public sector (net) Disbursements Of which: budget support Amortization due Monetary authority2 Commercial banks (net) Other sectors 705 2,206 8,660 6,660 -6,454 -724 -1,155 -14 378 134 12 232 -482 151 151 0 -633 1,181 -1,814 312 338 31 -26 0 -208 -1,917 2012 Est. 18 1,453 9,413 6,294 -7,961 -770 -1,119 -36.9 454 124 24 307 1,267 179 179 0 1,089 2,546 -1,457 5 241 52 -235 0 398 -1,860 -305 1,362 10,845 6,906 -9,484 -835 -1,302 -71 471 118 31 322 46 69 69 0 -23 1,970 -1,993 374 500 23 -126 0 -60 -2,307 -159 1,767 12,752 7,928 -10,985 -964 -1,550 -177 589 76 185 327 553 103 103 0 450 3,131 -2,680 275 320 0 -45 0 -60 -2,896 2013 2014 2015 Proj. -102 2,212 14,551 8,640 -12,339 -1,061 -1,807 -245 554 88 131 335 1,001 151 151 0 850 3,135 -2,285 210 376 48 -166 0 -60 -2,436 -51 2,626 16,402 9,346 -13,776 -1,162 -2,078 -317 562 90 130 342 924 147 147 0 777 3,409 -2,633 187 383 46 -196 0 -60 -2,759 -15 2,998 18,310 10,063 -15,313 -1,266 -2,305 -397 558 90 117 351 1,054 129 129 0 925 3,611 -2,687 217 391 46 -175 0 -60 -2,844 53 3,339 20,390 10,861 -17,051 -1,382 -2,461 -452 557 89 109 359 1,281 117 117 0 1,164 3,593 -2,430 307 400 45 -93 0 -60 -2,677 2016 2017 2018

Errors and omissions Overall balance Financing Central bank net reserves (- increase) Of which: Gross reserve change Of which: Use of Fund resources Exceptional financing Financing gap Memorandum items: Current account (percent of GDP) Current account, excluding grants (percent of GDP) Change in copper export volume (percent) Copper export price (U.S. dollars per tonne) Total official grants (percent of GDP) Gross international reserves3 In months of prospective imports Excluding FDI-financed imports GDP (millions of U.S. dollars)

-21 202

-558 727

0 -259

0 394

0 900

0 873

0 1,038

0 1,333

-202 -228 27 0 0

-727 -722 -5 0 0

259 274 -15 0 0

-394 -359 -35 0 0

-900 -833 -67 0 0

-873 -796 -77 0 0

-1,038 -965 -74 0 0

-1,333 -1,265 -68 0 0

3.7 2.9 0.3 8,003 1.5 2,167 2.8 3.3 19,204

0.1 -0.6 6.0 7,136 1.6 2,457 2.7 3.1 20,590

-1.3 -2.0 12.0 6,990 1.0 2,368 2.3 2.6 22,586

-0.6 -1.6 13.2 7,089 1.4 2,871 2.5 2.8 25,553

-0.4 -1.1 8.2 7,140 1.3 3,704 2.8 3.2 28,341

-0.2 -0.9 7.5 7,185 1.2 4,500 3.1 3.5 31,407

0.0 -0.6 7.0 7,230 1.0 5,465 3.4 3.8 34,882

0.1 -0.4 7.0 7,292 0.8 6,730 3.8 4.2 38,758

Sources: Zambian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.


1 Based on a recent Bank of Zambia survey on foreign private investment, the authorities are in the process of revising data for 2012 and the first half of 2013 on FDI inflows and their financing composition (reinvested earnings, borrowing from investors, equity capital). As the authorities were still analyzing this new data at the time the staff report was completed, this data has not been reflected in the tables in this report. 2 SDR allocation, long-term liability. 3 Unencumbered reserves only.

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ZAMBIA

Table 6. Zambia: Financial Soundness Indicators, 200713 (Percent, unless otherwise indicated)

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013 June

Capital adequacy Regulatory capital to risk-weighted assets Tier 1 regulatory capital to risk-weighted assets Capital to total assets Asset quality Past due advances (NPL) to total advances Loan loss provisions to nonperforming loans Bad debt provisions to advances Loan concentration Households Government and parastatals Agriculture Mining Manufacturing Construction Services Others Earnings and profitability Return on average assets Return on equity Gross interest income to total gross income Gross noninterest income to total gross income Net interest margin Liquidity Liquid assets to total assets Liquid assets to total deposits Advances to deposits ratio Exposure to foreign currency Foreign currency loans to total gross loans 1/ Foreign currency liabilities to total liabilities 1/ Net open position in foreign exchange to capital Source: Bank of Zambia. 1/ Data for 2013 are as of April. 32.5 27.1 7.1 42.1 35.8 6.9 36.4 38.0 2.5 32.8 39.6 4.1 39.1 39.0 5.5 28.7 22.9 2.8 27.3 24.7 2.2 37.6 46.0 57.4 35.5 49.9 66.3 38.0 52.6 60.1 43.8 58.5 53.1 40.3 53.3 57.1 36.0 49.0 66.0 34.9 48.1 65.7 4.7 35.1 63.1 36.9 11.5 3.6 20.8 66.6 33.4 10.4 2.1 9.4 65.1 34.9 10.7 2.9 12.1 58.6 41.4 9.0 3.7 25.5 59.3 40.7 8.1 3.9 20.8 61.3 38.7 8.4 3.3 18.1 64.4 35.6 8.5 15.5 9.1 18.4 4.1 11.0 3.7 13.3 25.0 30.1 1.9 16.0 5.0 11.0 4.0 9.0 23.0 30.9 3.1 19.0 4.0 12.0 3.0 8.0 20.0 32.2 4.6 17.6 3.2 12.7 5.8 7.0 16.9 30.8 4.7 17.7 4.2 12.2 4.2 7.1 19.1 34.3 3.9 22.6 5.7 11.3 3.7 3.9 14.6 32.9 9.3 21.1 5.9 11.4 3.6 4.3 11.5 8.8 73.2 6.4 7.2 104.6 6.1 12.6 86.6 10.9 14.8 80.3 11.9 10.4 76.7 8.0 8.1 73.5 6.0 8.2 73.2 4.7 18.6 15.9 9.2 18.6 15.7 9.9 22.3 18.9 11.2 22.1 19.1 10.4 19.2 16.8 10.2 21.3 19.4 12.0 23.3 21.7 13.0

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Table 7. Zambia: Millennium Development Goals, 200210


2002
Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger1 Proportion of population living in extreme poverty (%) Poverty gap ratio (incidence X depth of poverty) (%) Prevalence of underweight under 5 children (%) Goal 2: Achieve universal primary education2 Primary net enrollment ratio (%) Pupils reaching grade 7 (%) Literacy rate for 1524 year olds (%) Goal 3: Promote gender equality Ratio of girls to boys in primary education (%) Ratio of girls to boys in secondary education (%) Ratio of literate women to men (1524 olds) (%) Share of women employed in the nonagricultural sector (%) Proportion of seats held by women in national parliament (%) Goal 4: Reduce child mortality4 Under 5 mortality rate (per 1,000) Infant mortality rate (per 1,000 live births) One - year - olds immunized against measles (%) Goal 5: Improve maternal health5 Maternal mortality ratio (deaths per 100,000 live births) Births attended by skilled personel (%) Contraceptive Prevelance rate (% ) Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases6 HIV prevalence rate (%) Proportion of 15 - 24 - year - olds with comprehensive, correct knowledge of HIV & AIDS (%) Ratio of school attendance of orphans to non-orphans (10-14 years, %) Proportion of population with advanced HIV infection on ART (%) New malaria cases per 1,000 population Malaria fatality rate per 1,000 population Proportion of households with ITNs (pre - or - post treated, %) Goal 7: Ensure environmental sustainability7 Land covered by forest (%) Land protected to maintain biological diversity (%) CO2 emissions (metric tons per capita) Consumption of ozone depleting CFCs (ODP MT) Propotion of population using solid fuels (%) Goal 8: Develop a Global Partnership for Development8 Official Development as a percentage of GDP
3

2004

2006

2007

2009

2010

2015 Target
29 31 11 100 100 100 100 100 30 63.6 35.7 100 162.3

46 28.1 77.7 168 95 84 729 43.4 18.6 15.6 31.0 79.1 388 48 13.6

53 53 20 85.1 82 70 95 383 33 39.6 0.2 10 83.8

51 34 97.0 83 97 86 80 14 412 40 37.8 0.2 6.6 83.7

14.6 96 89 80 14 119.0 70.0 84.9 591.2 46.5 24.6 14.3 48.0 93 358 40 53.3 59.6 0.2 4.1

102.0 91.7 96 88 80 14 40.2 92 246 29 41 17.4^

42.3 28 13.3 93.7 90.9 88.7 99 86 11.4 137.6 76.2 94 483 44

16 or less

77.6 80 330 255 or less 34 11 64.3 49.9 41 82.9

4.6

4.7

5.9

Source: Millenium Development Goals Progress Report - Zambia - 2013, United Nations Development Programme. ^ Includes emissions from deforestation and land use change Goal 1 targets: Halve, between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of people whose income is less than one dollar a day. Halve, between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of people who suffer from hunger. 2 Goal 2 target: Ensure that, by 2015, children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling. 3 Goal 3 target: Eliminate gender disparity in primary and secondary education preferably by 2005 and to all levels of education no later than 2015. 4 Goal 4 target: Reduce by two-thirds, between 1990 and 2015, the under-5 mortality rate. 5 Goal 5 target: Reduce by three-quarters, between 1990 and 2015, the maternal mortality ratio. 6 Goal 6 targets: Have halted by 2015, and begun to reverse, the spread of HIV/AIDS. Have halted by 2015, and begun to reverse, the incidence of malaria and other major diseases. 7 Goal 7 targets: Integrate the principles of sustainable development into country policies and programs and reverse the loss of environmental resources. Halve, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water. 8 Goal 8 targets: Develop further an open, rule-based, predictable, nondiscriminatory trading and financial system. Address the special seeds of the least developed countries. Address the special needs of landlocked countries and small island developing countries.
1

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ZAMBIA

Figure 1. Zambia: Real Sector Developments


Growth has picked up strongly over the past decade, supported by higher copper production... Real GDP Growth (percent change) ... but with activity increasingly driven by construction and services. Contribution to Real GDP Growth (percentage points 9 8 800 600 400 Zambia Sub-Saharan Africa Comparators Copper output (1000 tons, rhs) 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Generally prudent macro policies... Broad Money Growth (percent change)
Broad money growth Government net domestic financing (% of GDP, rhs) Tertiary sector Secondary sector Primary sector

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1,000

7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 2009 2010 2011 2012

200 0

... have helped bring down inflation. CPI Inflation (percent change) Zambia Sub-Saharan Africa Comparators

50 40 30 20 10 0

6 30 4 2 0 -2 -4 0 20

10

2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012

As a result, income levels have been rising rapidly... GDP Per Capita (current PPP dollars) 2,500

... and poverty has declined, although it is still high. Proportion of Population in Poverty (percent) 75

2,000

70

1,500

65

1,000

500

Zambia Sub-Saharan Africa Comparators 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012

60

55 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007

Sources: Zambia, Central Statistics Office; IMF, World Economic Outlook database. Median of Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius , Mozambique, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, and Uganda.

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Figure 2. Zambia: Fiscal Developments (Percent of GDP)


The overall cash deficit in 2013 is expected to widen due to increased expenditure and revenue underperformance.
35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 -10 -4 -6 -8 -10 Revenues Expenditures Overall Balance (rhs) Non-mining balance (rhs) 2010 2011 2012 -14 2013 proj. -12 One-off mining arrears payments 0 10 -2 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 proj.

Expenditure increased due to higher wage s, capital spending, and subsidies (maize and fuel).
Other Wages and Salaries Capital Spending Purchase of Goods and Services Transfers for Maize Fuel Subsidies

Revnue performance has been weak in 2013 mainly due to lower than expected mining corporate income tax.
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 proj. -2 4 Personal Income Taxes VAT Indirect Taxes (Non-VAT) Corporate Income Tax (Non-Mining) Other Non-Tax Mining Revenues (exc. one-off payments) 8 10

In 2013, the bulk of financing was domestic including eurobond proceeds saved from 2012.
External Financing Domestic Financing Public Domestic Gross Debt (rhs) Total Public Debt (rhs) 40 35 30 6 25 20 15 10 0 5 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 proj.

Sources: Zambian authorities and IMF staff estimates.

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Figure 3. Zambia: External Developments


Copper exports will increase in 2013 mainly due to higher export volumes. Also, non-traditional exports will register an increase. Overall, exports of goods would increase by 16 percent in 2013. Non-oil imports continue to increase in 2013 (20 percent). A slighly higher pace than the one observed in the previous year, mainly following developments in FDI inflows.

12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0

US$ million

10,000
US$ million

8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 2005


Copper exports

2006

2007

Non-traditional exports

2008

2009

2010

2011

Exports of goods

2012

2013

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

Oil imports

Non-oil imports

Imports of goods

As a result, the current account balance would deteriorate in 2013 mainly driven by the decline in the balance of goods and services.

FDI net inflows would show an increase compated to in 2012 and disbursements to the government, without the 2012 Eurobond proceeds, would continue a positive trend.

2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 -500 -1,000 -1,500

US$ million

8 4 0 -4 -8 -12

2,000
US$ million

1,600 1,200 800 400 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 FDI net inflows Official disbursements

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013


Current account balance Current account (% GDP, RHS) Trade balance (goods)

Gross reserve accumulation would show a decline in 2013 due to the transfer of Eurobond proceeds to implementing agencies. Also, central bank's readily available reserves (unencumbered) would show a slight decline (89 million).

Reserve import coverage, based of unencumbered reserves, would be 2.3 months of prospective imports in 2013, showing a decline compared to 2012 (2.7 months).

1,000 800 600 400 200 0 -200 -400 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Gross reserve accumulation Gross reserve accumulation (unencumbered)
US$ million

3,500 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Stock of reserves Months of next year imports (RHS)
US$ million

1
Stock of reserves (unencumbered)

Source: Bank of Zambia.

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Figure 4. Zambia Banking Sector Developments


The banking system is well capitalized...
25

...and asset quality has improved.


25 110

Capital Adequacy Ratios


(In percent)

Banks' Asset Quality


(In percent)

20 15

20

20 60

10 Loan loss provisions to NPL (LHS) NPL to total advances (RHS) 5 0

15

Tier 1 capital to RWA Total capital to RWA

15

10

10

Jan-09

Jan-10

Jan-11

Jan-12

Jan-13

Jul-09

Jul-10

Jul-11

Jul-12

10

Jan-09

Jan-10

Jan-11

Jan-12

But nonperforming loans in Zambia remain high compared with its peers.
16 12 8 4 0

Credit growth is slowing down.


16 12 8 20 4 0 0 0 -20 20 80 60 40

Jan-13
80 60 40

Jul-09

Jul-10

Jul-11

Nonperforming loans
(In percent)

Growth in Credit to the Private Sector


(Annual percentage change)

Mozambique

Uganda

Tanzania

Zambia

Ghana

Kenya

-20

Jan-09

Jan-10

Jan-11

Jan-12

Jan-13

Jul-09

Jul-10

Jul-11

Jul-12

Jul-12

The banking system is highly concentrated.

Enhancing access to financial services in rural areas is the government's policy priority.

Asset shares of banks

(June 2013; percent of total banking sector assets)

350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0

Number of Bank Branches and Agencies


Whole country Lusaka

39.5

60.5

Top 4 Banks

Remaining 15 Banks

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 June

Source: Zambian authorities.

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ZAMBIA

Appendix I. Competitiveness1
Over the last decade, Zambias competitiveness has been boosted by strengthened macroeconomic fundamentals and a favorable business environment. However, exports remain dominated by copper, and weaknesses in infrastructure, scarcity of skilled labor and rising labor costs, and recent uncertainty about the policy direction pose challenges to sustaining rapid economic development. To secure continued growth and diversification, Zambia will need to boost investment in infrastructure and enhance provision of education, while maintaining a business friendly environment. Background Zambias economy has over the past decade expanded rapidly. Overall output growth has been strong at an average of 6.2 percent a year since 2003, about half a percentage point more than for Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) as a whole. This positive outcome has been supported by prudent macroeconomic policies that kept fiscal balances and inflation in check as well as by rising copper prices that improved the countrys terms of trade. While exports remain dominated by copper, noncopper exports are now growing rapidly. Increased copper production notwithstanding, the largest contributors to real GDP growth over the past decade have been construction and services. From 2002 and until 2008-10, non-copper exports were declining as a share of both GDP and of total exports. Since 2010, however, growth has started to diversify, with the mainly agricultural nontraditional exports growing in nominal US dollar terms by an average of about 45 percent a year.
50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: Bank of Zambia.

Merchandise Exports
(in percent of GDP) Total exports Copper and cobalt Other (non-traditional)

Sustaining Zambias strong overall growth performance in the face of uncertain prospects for copper prices will require that the ongoing diversification of the economy is maintained. That, in turn, will require a supportive business environment and availability of credit and needed human and infrastructure resources. This appendix examines the progress and challenges towards improving the business environment, access to finance, and labor quality and cost. Additionally, the

Prepared by Kareem Ismail and Tobias Rasmussen.

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annex considers key issues relating to the agricultural sector, where the majority of the workforce remains employed. The Business Environment According to the World Banks Doing Business indicators, Zambias business environmentalthough middling from a global perspectiveis among the best in Africa.2 At 83rd in the world, Zambias doing business ranking is the 7th highest in SSA and in Southern Africa is only surpassed by South Africa and Botswana.3 Moreover, Zambia is 47th worldwide in terms of overall progress since 2005. Zambia performs especially well in areas such as the ease of starting a business, getting credit, and dealing with construction permits. The country also benefits greatly from political stability and a conflict-free setting.

Ease of Doing Business


(distance to frontier, percentage points)
70 Zambia and Regional Averages Overall Zambia Southern Africa SSA 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 55 30 20 50 10 0 45 Zambia by Area 2013 2005

65

60

40 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: World Bank, Doing Business 2014. Note: Scores show how far Zambia is from the best performing economy on each indicator, with higher values indicating a smaller gap. Southern Africa is average of Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.

As pointed out in an independent evaluation of the Doing Business survey (see www.worldbank.org/ieg/doingbusiness), care should be exercised when interpreting these indicators given subjective interpretation, limited coverage of business constraints, and a small number of informants which tend to overstate the indicators' coverage and explanatory power. In Doing Business 2014, Zambias ranking of 83, compares to 41 for South Africa, 56 for Botswana, 98 for Namibia, 123 for Swaziland, 136 for Lesotho, 170 for Zimbabwe, and an average of 141 for SSA.
3

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Constraints on competitiveness include lacking infrastructure and in some areas high costs of doing business. International trade is expensive (comparable to Rwanda and Uganda), a result of the country being landlocked with weak transport infrastructure. Moreover, a shortage of electricity despite sizable hydropower potential is a major impediment to growth. In addition, a series of recent regulatory changes, including bans on using foreign currency in domestic transactions and new requirements for making international transactions, have added to firms
5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0

Costs of Trade

(US dollars per container)

Cost to Export

Cost to Import

Rwanda

Uganda

Zambia

Tanzania

SSA Average

OECD Average

Source: Doing Business Indicators, World Bank

costs. Imposed with little prior consultation among stakeholders and in some cases revised multiple times, these new regulations have also raised uncertainty about the policy direction. Efforts towards modernizing transport and energy infrastructure would help ease the structural bottlenecks. Zambia has a fast-growing market for exports to neighboring countries, including for agricultural products, cement, and electricity. If well implemented, the countrys plans to upgrade road, rail, and power infrastructure could provide important support to continued economic development by facilitating trade internationally as well as within Zambia. Calderon (2009) measures the potential growth dividend from infrastructure improvement in Zambia and estimates that bringing the countrys infrastructure to a level comparable to the regional leader (Mauritius) would boost real GDP per capita growth by between 2 and 3 percentage points.4 Access to Finance One of the main drivers of Zambias improved Doing Business score relates to access to credit. Indeed, according to the World Bank, Zambia is now among the best performing SSA countries in terms of institutions and regulations
35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Ghana Zambia
Sources: National Authorities
4

Access to Credit, 2012


(in percent) 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Ghana Zambia Manufacturing Agriculture sector share in total credit Manufacturing Agriculture credit ratio to sector value added

The study does not specify how long such a growth dividend would last, but by using a linear estimate based on data spanning 1960-2005, the methodology suggests that the effect would persist over possibly several decades.

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that facilitate access to credit, reflecting the depth of its credit information infrastructure and good enforcement of contracts. Progress in this area has helped boost overall credit growth to an average of over 30 percent during 2011-12. Notably, the share of credit to sectors such as agriculture and manufacturingwhere access to finance is traditionally limited in SSAis significantly higher than in peer countries. Overall, however, Zambias financial depth remains shallow compared to its peers, with credit to the private sector at 15 percent of GDP in 2012, well below the median for lowermiddle income countries in the region of 28 percent of GDP. Foreign financing is another important source of investment funding in Zambia, but inflows have largely been limited to the mining sector. As of 2011, almost 70 percent of Zambias $11 billion stock of inward foreign direct investment (FDI) was in the mining sector. These investments have enabled a surge in copper production from an estimated 260 thousand tons in 2000 to current levels of about 800 thousand tons a year. More FDI inflows into other sectors besides mining would support overall growth, as foreign investment not only boosts available resources but also tends to bring know-how and technological improvement. Human Capital and Cost of Labor Aside from high transport costs and other infrastructure weaknesses, the availability and cost of human capital is an important constraint on Zambias competitiveness, even as health and education indictors show considerable progress in recent years. Life expectancy at birth has increased by over 15 percent since 2002; HIV prevalence among adults is on a declining trend; and school enrollment rates have increased markedly. At 6.7 years, average schooling compares favorably within the region: on par with Ghana and exceeding all low-income neighbors in the region and even Namibia, and slightly above the average for countries assessed to have medium human development by the UNDP.
Zambia: Foreign Direct Investment Stocks by Sector
(billions of US dollars) Mining Agriculture Manufacturing Wholesale and Retail Trade Transport and Communications Construction Real Estate Financial Institutions Deposit Taking Corporations Finance and Insurance Tourism Accomodation and Food Information and Communication Electricity, gas and steam Other 0 Source: Bank of Zambia. 1 2 3 4 5

2010 2011

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Public Spending on Health (percent of GDP)


Life expectancy at birth' total (years), rhs

70

Public Spending on Education (percent of GDP)


Average years of schooling, rhs
2001

60

2010
5 50
5 6

40

2011

30

20

2 2

2002

10

1 1

Botswana

Ghana

Malawi

Rwanda

South Africa

Zambia

Sources: World Bank and IMF staff estimates

Ghana Malawi Rwanda Sources: UNDP, World Bank, and IMF staff estimates

South Africa

Zambia

However, there remains significant scope for improvement. Life expectancy is among the lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa, even when compared to lower-income Malawi where HIV prevalence is similar. Access to education and health services remains very limited in rural areas. Water and sanitation conditions remain poor, with only 50 percent of rural population having access to improved water sources. Moreover, even those with access to schooling often receive a substandard education, with Zambian students underperforming in both reading and mathematics compared with their peers in other countries (Hungi and others 2010). This is in part due to an elevated pupil-to-teacher ratio in primary education, which at 61 in 2011 was the highest in the region after the Central African Republic and Chad, as sampled by the World Bank. Teachers are especially scarce in rural areas due to the difficulty of attracting qualified candidates. High labor costs are another challenge. Labor costs in Zambia have contributed to high levels of informality or self-employment, with wage employment estimated at only 16.8 percent of total employment in 2010 (World Bank, 2013). Based on firm-level data, labor costs in manufacturing at about $2,100 in 2007 were among the highest in SSA, although on par with other regions when viewed in relation to productivity. Since 2007, however, minimum wages in the private sector have increased by about 80 percent in real terms and currently stand at close to $2,600 a year (about 160 percent of GDP per capita) when allowances are included. Moreover, following the recent wage increase for civil servants, the lowest wage in the public sector is now about $6,500 a yearabout 4 times GDP per capita and 2 times the minimum wage for the private sectorand is bound to put further upward pressure on wages in the private sector.

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Labor Costs in Manufacturing


7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 Labor Cost

(survey medians, annual, per worker, in 2012 US dollars) Unit Labor Cost, rhs

0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0

Angola (2006)

Tanzania (2006)

Kenya (2007)

Mali (2007)

Mozambique (2007)

Ethiopia (2006)

Uganda (2006)

Zambia (2007)

Ghana (2007)

Nigeria (2007)

Europe and Central Asia

Senegal (2007)

Sub-Saharan Africa

Regional Means
Source: Gelb and others (2013), based on World Bank Enterprise Surveys data. Notes: Original data converted from 2005 to 2012 prices using US CPI. Unit labor cost is labor cost divided by value added per worker. Regional mean for Sub-Saharan Africa based on countries shown. East Asia and Pacific: Indonesia, Philippines, and Vietnam; Europe and Central Asia: Russia, Turkey, and Ukraine; Latin America: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Columbia, Mexico, and Uruguay; and South Asia: Bangladesh and India.

Agriculture A key sector for continued economic development in Zambia is agriculture. While agriculture accounts for 55 to 65 percent of total employment, the sectors contribution to GDP stands at less than 10 percent. The country is very well endowed for farming, but less than 20 percent of arable land is cultivated and most farmers operate on a subsistence basis with low productivity. Average farm yields, although higher than in many other countries in the region, trail behind South Africa and agricultural exporters in Asia. Key obstacles to development include lack of transportation and market infrastructure, difficulties in
Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators. 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0

Cereal Yields

(average 2009-11, kg/hectare)

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Latin America

South Asia

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obtaining land titles and finance, and policies that have been overly focused on maize to the detriment of crops with higher income potential. With effective efforts to address these constraints, the sector could be a significant source of export earnings and a major driver of poverty reduction. Conclusion Zambias favorable business environment and strong macroeconomic fundamentals have supported high economic growth over the past decade. More recently, there has been rapid progress towards diversifying exports and lessening the countrys dependence on copper. This all speaks to the healthy competitiveness of the Zambian economy. Nevertheless, the country faces significant constraints that will hold back continued growth and diversification unless addressed. These include an inadequate infrastructure, especially in transportation and electricity; poor health and education standards; high labor costs in the formal sector; and low yields in agriculture. These are all areas that are being targeted in the National Development Plan. The challenge will be to ensure that fiscal space is made available for the resulting spending needs and also to ensure that what is spent is effectively used. Careful planning and prioritization is needed, supported by evaluation of implementation capacity, estimates of return on investment, and clear communication.

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REFERENCES
Calderon, Cesar, 2009. Infrastructure and Growth in Africa. World Bank, Policy Research Working Paper Series 4914. Gelb, Alan, Christian Meyer, and Vijaya Ramachandran, 2013. Does Poor Mean Cheap? A Comparative Look at Africas Industrial Labor Costs. Center for Global Development, Working Paper No. 325. Hungi, Njora, Demus Makuwa, Kenneth Ross, Mioko Saito, Stephanie Dolata, Frank van Cappelle, Laura Paviot, and Jocelyne Vellien, 2010. SACMEQ III Project Results: Pupil Achievement Levels in Reading and Mathematics. Southern and Eastern Africa Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality. The World Bank, 2013. Doing Business 2013. World Bank. The World Bank, 2013. Zambias Jobs Challenge: Realities on the Ground. World Bank, Zambia Economic Brief.

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Appendix II. Risk Assessment Matrix


Main Sources of Risks
Delayed fiscal adjustment in Zambia

Likelihood (high, medium or low)


Medium The needed fiscal adjustment to address the emerging financing gaps would be delayed until after the next elections in 2016.

Expected Impact on Economy (high, medium or low)


High Given the governments high funding needs, the failure to contain the wage bill and other recurrent expenditure could reduce needed capital and social spending (which will hurt growth potential and poverty reduction), or crowd out private sector credit, raise interest rates, and prompt currency depreciation (which will hurt growth and generate inflationary pressure). Public debt would rise rapidly, reducing fiscal buffers.

Loss of investor confidence in the Zambian business environment

Low to Medium The measures taken recently to tighten regulation of interest rates, together with the increases in minimum and government wages and concern about fiscal sustainability could undermine investor confidence. Medium Re-emergence of financial stress in the Euro area as a result of stalled or incomplete delivery of national or Euro area policy commitments could lead to strains in cost of market access for peripheral sovereigns. Medium Lower demand from emerging markets, especially China, could result in a substantial drop in commodity prices.

Medium to High Loss of investor confidence could result in a sharp drop in FDI, which will hurt exports, job creation, and growth potential. Zambias funding costs in the global capital markets could rise substantially, resulting in additional debt service costs for the government given its need for substantial external financing. Medium Given the emerging fiscal financing gaps, Zambia needs a substantial amount of external financing. A sustained shutdown of global funding markets would put pressure on the domestic government securities market, leading to a rise in interest rates and crowding out private sector credit.

Re-emergence of financial stress in the Euro area

Lower than anticipated growth potential in emerging markets

Medium A substantial fall in commodity prices, particularly copper prices, could result in a sharp drop in exports and FDI in the mining sector. Part of the impact would be offset by lower profit and dividend payments to foreign owners. A deterioration in the current account could weaken the currently low reserve buffer.

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Appendix III. A Regional Comparison of Government Wage Spending1,2


This appendix illustrates how Zambia compares to peer countries in the region on government wage spending.3 The rapid increase in average wages that took place in September 2013 is raising pressures on government finances, potentially crowding out public investment and priority spending in health and education. This appendix also illustrates a few recent examples from countries where public wage spending increased rapidly describing macroeconomic outcomes following such spending and policies that may have helped mitigate the impact of ratcheted wage increases. Finally, the appendix draws implications for Zambia. Background. The government has increased wages of civil servants by an average of 45 percent following the annual wage negotiations round with the unions. The increase in wages targeted a tripling of the minimum salaries. Even though the wage increase did not take effect until September 2013, wage spending has gone over budget and is expected to reach almost 10 percent of GDP by end year. The result is that Zambias wage bill will close in on some of the highest in Sub-Saharan Africa, comparable to Mozambique, Angola, and Cape Verde and about 2.5 percent of GDP higher than the average in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Despite a planned wage freeze in 2014 (both on salaries and net recruitment), the wage bill is expected
1 2 3

12 10 8 6 4 2 0

Wages in percent of GDP (2014)


Wage increase above 2013 MTEF

Nigeria Cameroon Ghana Cape Verde

Uganda Sub-Saharan Africa Angola Mozambique

Rwanda Kenya Zambia Tanzania

Sources: WEO and IMF staff projections

Wages in percent of Revenues Excluding Grants (2013 except where noted)


60
Wage increase above budget Wage increase above 2013 MTEF

50 40 30 20 10 0

Uganda Cameroon Mozambique Zambia (2014)


Sources: WEO and IMF staff projections

Rwanda Kenya Nigeria Ghana

Angola Sub-Saharan Africa Zambia (2013) Cape Verde

Prepared by Kareem Ismail.

Projections and data in this note are IMF staff estimates based on the October 2013 WEO.

Comparator countries (see charts) include Angola, Cameron, Cape Verde, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, Rwanda, Uganda.

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to reach 11 percent of GDP, reflecting the full year impact of the 2013 wage increase. Fiscal risks and stress are even higher than ratios-to-GDP suggest due to the comparatively weak revenue mobilization in Zambia. The wage bill relative to revenues is expected at 49 percent in 2013 rising to 54 percent in 2014, among the highest in SubSaharan Africa and nearly 18 percent higher than the median. Moreover, Zambias wage bill will be among the largest in the comparator group relative to its current expenditure, which restricts the scope for financing the wage bill through cuts to other noninvestment expenditure. Government wage spending can be a significant contributor to fiscal, and in some cases external, imbalances due to the ratcheting impact of such spending on expenditure. Rising wage spending not only affects fiscal balances, but through rising demand for imports may have repercussion on the external position. Wage commitments are politically difficult to reverse through cutting wages or firing public workers. The following section examines cases from three countries in Sub-Saharan Africa: Angola, Botswana, and Ghana. Experience of Peers
Angola
60
Wage increase above budget

Wages in percent of Government Current Expenditure (2013 except where noted)


Wage increase above 2013 MTEF

50 40 30 20 10 0

Rwanda Uganda Ghana Nigeria


Sources: WEO and IMF staff projections

Kenya Angola Zambia (2013) Mozambique

Cameroon Sub-Saharan Africa Zambia (2014) Cape Verde

The experience of countries in the region that have abruptly raised wage spending over the last five years shows how challenging it is to unwind the impact from such expenditure. This section covers experiences from Angola, Botswana, and Ghana where real wage spending increased significantly (37 percent in 2008 followed by 8 percent in 2009

(percentage)
12 Wage in percent of revenue excl. grants Wage in percent of expense 11 Wage in percent of GDP, lhs 30 40

10 20 9 10

7 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook.

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in Angola; 22 percent in 2010 in Botswana; 45 percent in 2011 followed by 66 percent in 2012 in Ghana). 4 These countries raised their wage bill in excess of 1.5 percent of GDP in one year through increased salaries in Botswana and Ghana, and increased recruitment in the case of Angola. Only Angola has managed to reduce the wage burden from peak through containing wages and adjusting the exchange rate, which was further helped by rising oil revenue. All three countries experienced rising fiscal deficits and loss in international reserve coverage following the wage increase with two of the countries, Angola and Ghana, experiencing significant exchange rate depreciation.5 In Angola and Ghana exchange rate depreciation helped to partially mitigate the wage spending increases. In the case of Angola the wage bill increased by 2.5 percent of GDP in 2008, while in Ghana the wage bill increased by 2.7 percent of GDP over 2011-12. The wage bill as a percent of revenue peaked at 32 percent in Angola in 2008 and 66 percent in Ghana in 2012. A ramp up in oil revenue in Angola together with a decline in real wage spending helped reduce this ratio to around 20 percent of revenues in 2010. The exchange rate depreciated in both countries significantly with devaluation in the case of Angola by 22 percent over 2008-10, and by 26 percent in Ghana over 2010-12. While exchange rate depreciation contributed to rising inflation in Angola, it had limited impact on inflation in Ghana where monetary policy tightened significantly. Tightened monetary policy in Ghana raised rates on government bonds, which attracted portfolio inflows and stemmed the decline in gross international reserve coverage from 3.2 to 2.8 months of imports over 2010-12. In Angola, recovering oil prices helped rebuild gross international reserves in 2010 following a sharp decline in 2009 that led to a Stand-By Arrangement with the Fund.
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook.

Ghana

Wage in percent of revenue excl. grants Wage in percent of expense Wage in percent of GDP, lhs 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0

(percentage)

4 5

For Ghana, the wage bill includes deferred payments associated with transition to the single spine salary structure.

In the case of Angola, the decline in international reserves was due to a combination of oil revenue collapse and expansionary policies. Gross international reserves recovered in 2010, but even then net international reserves remained lower than they were in 2008.

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A multi-year structural wage freeze in Botswana has helped contain the wage bill though its impact was limited by temporary increases in allowances. Botswana established a three-year structural wage freeze in 2009 following a 125 percent cumulative increase in public wages over 2001-09. In the third year, union strikes demanded that the government increase wages by 16 percent. The government settled worker demands by raising
11 13 14

Botswana
(percentage)
Wage in percent of revenue excl. grants Wage in percent of expense Wage in percent of GDP, lhs 40 50

30

20 12 10

0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook.

wages by 3 percent. However, wage spending as a share of GDP remained persistently high and increased by 2012 due to temporary allowances aimed at the lower end of the wage ladder. The wage bill as a share of revenue declined by a small margin from a peak of 39 percent in 2010 to 35 percent in 2012. Throughout the wage freeze period, international reserve coverage declined significantly from 16 months of imports in 2009 to 11 months of imports by 2012. Lessons Learned Zambias adjustment to the wage increase will require significant fiscal and monetary policy tightening. On the fiscal side, revenue mobilization is critical to help alleviate the risks from the elevated wage bill and a multi-year wage freeze is necessary to contain spending. On the monetary side, maintaining tight policies will be necessary to support low inflation and reduce pressures on the currency. Given the currently low international reserve coverage, the authorities would need to abstain from central bank intervention in the foreign exchange market, except to smooth volatility while gradually building up reserves. A multi-year wage freeze will require clear communication and support from stakeholders and strengthened expenditure controls. Much of the public discontent surrounding the recently announced wage freeze policy is related to disparities in the salary structure and not to public salaries themselves, which are significantly higher than private sector wages. The government needs to highlight the risks stemming from the current wage levels and the need for a wage freeze while reaching an agreement with stakeholders on how to manage current disparities in the civil service salary structure. Following the currently planned wage freeze for 2014-15, multi-year wage negotiations, rather than agreements on a year-by-year basis, would facilitate the efforts at
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containing the wage bill and would help mitigate political pressures to raise wages in election years. Additionally, wage freeze decisions need to imply controlling not only of base structural salaries, but also of merit increases, allowances, and recruitment. In order to do so, strengthening expenditure controls on salaries and enhancing communication with government agencies on wage and staffing policies will be critical.

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Appendix IV. External Stability Assessment1


Zambias real effective exchange rate (REER) has appreciated since the early 2000s, mostly because of the improvement in terms of trade (Figure 1). High copper prices were a major driver of the terms of trade, and copper contributed about three-fourths of export earnings. The depreciation in 200809 was mainly driven by a plunge in copper prices associated with the global financial crisis. In 2012, the REER appreciated by 3 percent mainly due to the inflation differential. The standard tools developed by the IMFs Consultative Group on Exchange Rate (CGER) have been used to assess the Zambian exchange rate. For that purpose, the current account balance presented in the Balance of Payments (Table 5) has been adjusted. The balance of payments for Zambia shows the (mostly foreign-owned) mining companies as keeping a large share of the mining export proceeds abroad. This large financial account outflow is simply the estimated difference between the declared mining related inflows and outflows, conventionally recorded in the financial account instead of in the current account. To better reflect the true impact of the mining related flows on the foreign currency market, and the exchange rate and international reserves, for the purpose of this exercise, these outflows have been reclassified to the current account as additional dividend outflows.2
300 250 200 150 100 50 0 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012
Sources: IMF Information Notice System and World Economic Outlook.

Figure 1. Zambia: Real and Nominal Effective Exchange Rate

NEER

REER

Terms of Trade

1 2

Prepared by Marco Arena.

Based on discussions with the authorities, the estimation is done assuming that 80 percent of the financial outflows are reclassified to the current account. An additional scenario is presented with an adjustment of 60 percent. In this context, the underlying current account would be equal to the baseline current account plus 80 (60) percent of the financial outflows.

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Under current policies (without fiscal adjustment), there is conflicting evidence of whether the real effective exchange rate is over- or undervalued (Text Table 1). The estimates based on the external sustainability approach suggest an overvaluation of almost 6 percent, consistent with a medium-term projection of 75 percent in the net foreign liabilities ratio. In addition, the macroeconomic balance approach suggests an overvaluation of 8 percent. On the other hand, the real equilibrium exchange rate approach suggests an undervaluation, but that is not statistically significant because the actual REER is within the confidence intervals around the equilibrium real exchange rate (Figure 2). Under an alternative scenario (Text Table 2), where the baseline current account is adjusted with 60 percent of the financial outflows, both the external sustainability and macro-balance approach do not suggest a real exchange rate misalignment.
180 160 140 120 100 80 60 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Sources: IMF World Economic Outlook and staff estimates.
Actual rate Equilibrium rate 90% confidence interval

Figure 2. Equilibrium Real Effective Exchange Rate

Approach

Text Table 1. Exchange rate assessment: baseline results 1/ Current account/GDP Norm Underlying -10.1 -10.1
2/

REER Overvaluation 5.7 8.4 -13.9

Gap -1.8 -2.6

External sustainability Macroeconomic balance Equilibirum real exchange rate

3/

-8.3 -7.5

1/ Based on IMF CGER methodology and extension by Francis Vitek (IMF 2009, unpublished). 2/Adjusted current account ratio to GDP (current account under the baseline plus 80% of financial outflows). 3/ Current account norm consistent with a net foreign liability ratio (NFL) of 75 percent. Using a NFL ratio of 80 percent would imply an overvaluation of 3.9 percent.

Approach

Text Table 2. Exchange rate assessment: alternative scenario results 1/ Current account/GDP REER Norm Underlying -7.9 -7.9
2/

Gap 0.4 -0.4

Overvaluation -1.4 1.3 -13.9

External sustainability Macroeconomic balance Equilibirum real exchange rate

3/

-8.3 -7.5

1/ Based on IMF CGER methodology and extension by Francis Vitek (IMF 2009, unpublished). 2/ Adjusted current account ratio to GDP (current account under the baseline plus 60% of financial outflows). 3/ Current account norm consistent with a net foreign liability ratio (NFL) of 75 percent. Using a NFL ratio of 80 percent would imply an undervaluation of 3.2 percent.

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Appendix V. Lending Rate Ceilings and Their Impact on the Nonbanking Sector1
1. The authorities are concerned about high lending rates and limited access to credit by
Bank Lending Rate
(In percent) 35 CPI (yoy change) 30 25 20 15 10 5 Lending rate (percent)

SMEs. The financial sector, dominated by the banking sector, has grown steadily and remains profitable. However, despite various measures taken, the authorities believe that lending interest rates in Zambia remain very high, which has limited access to credit by SMEs in particular, given high borrowing costs. 2. In early 2013 the BOZ

0
Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jul-08 Jul-09 Jul-10 Jul-11 Oct-08 Oct-09 Oct-10 Oct-11 Jul-12 Apr-08 Apr-09 Apr-10 Apr-11 Apr-12 Oct-12

introduced ceilings on effective annual interest rates for banks, nonbanks and microfinance institutions.2 The ceilings were initially set at 18.25 percent for banks, 30 percent for non-banks, and 42 percent for microfinance institutions, with the levels tied to the BOZ policy rate, which was 9.25 percent at that time.

Sources: Bank of Zambia and Central Statistics Office.

Nonbanks Lending Rates and Interest Rate Caps (In percent)


NBFI Subsector Average Interest Rates in Q4 2012 Enterprise-lending MFIs 91.4 120.6 42.9 25.3 20.6 27.0 42 30 30 30 30 30 All other MFIs Leasing companies Building societies Development Bank of Zambia National Savings and Credit Bank Source: Bank of Zambia Interest rate caps

3.

Banks initially indicated that the

ceilings were not binding for their customers, except for a few SMEs. However, indications are that the ceiling for micro-finance institutions (MFIs) is particularly binding, as shown by their very high lending rates amounting to over 90 to 120 percent. In addition, the ceiling for
1 2

Prepared by Byung Kyoon Jang.

The effective annual interest rate is defined as the total costs of borrowing expressed as an annual percentage rate. The total costs of borrowing are all the costs known to the financial service provider, including interest, commissions and any other kind of fees which the borrower is required to pay in connection with a credit agreement, and any other costs in respect of ancillary services relating to the credit agreement, if the conclusion of a service contract is compulsory in order to obtain the credit or to obtain it on the terms and conditions marketed.

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banks has likely become more binding, as the spread between Treasury bill rates and the ceiling has declined since the ceilings introduction. 4. Since the introduction of the lending rate caps, most nonbanks have continued to

expand their loan portfolios. Total nonbank loans have thus risen, albeit from a small base, by almost 30 percent from December 2012 to August 2013. The nonbank sector, excluding enterpriselending MFIs, also continued to remain profitable. 5. Some restructuring of the nonbanking sector is underway since the introduction of the

ceilings. In response to the declining interest margins, nonbanks, particularly the MFIs, have implemented cost reduction programs, including closing marginal branches, and adjusted their business models to remain viable. Four consumer-lending MFIs decided to exit the financial sector, which could indicate that some inefficient nonbanks are weeded out since the introduction of the lending rate caps. The BOZ, however, has continued to receive MFI license applications this year. The BOZ has asked a foreign NGO (Financial Sector Deepening Africa) to conduct an indepth study of the impact of the lending rate ceilings.
5,000 0 20,000

Nonbanks Profitability
(Thousands of Kwacha)
NBFI Sector Profitability Enterprise Lending MFIs Profitability 15,000 2 per. Mov. Avg. (NBFI Sector Profitability)

10,000

-5,000 Jan 13 Feb 13 Mar 13 Apr 13 May 13 Jun 13 Jul 13 Aug 13 Sep 13

Source: Bank of Zambia

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STAFF REPORT FOR THE 2013 ARTICLE IV
November 26, 2013

CONSULTATIONINFORMATIONAL ANNEX
Prepared By
African Department (in consultation with other departments)

CONTENTS
RELATIONS WITH THE FUND ___________________________________________________________2 JOINT WORLD BANK-FUND WORK PROGRAM, 201314 _____________________________9 STATISTICAL ISSUES ___________________________________________________________________ 10

ZAMBIA

RELATIONS WITH THE FUND


As of October 31, 2013 Membership Status: Joined: September 23, 1965; Article VIII General Resources Account:
SDR Million Quota Fund holdings of currency Reserve position in Fund 489.10 489.10 0.02 Percent Quota 100.0 100.0 0.0

SDR Department
SDR Million Net cumulative allocation Holdings 469.14 386.30 Percent Allocation 100.0 82.34

Outstanding Purchases and Loans


SDR Million ECF arrangements 255.31 Percent Quota 52.20

Latest Financial Arrangements


Type ECF 1 ECF ECF
1 1

Approval Date 06/04/2008 06/16/2004 03/25/1999

Expiration Date 06/29/2011 09/30/2007 03/28/2003

Amount Approved (SDR Million) 220.10 220.10 278.90

Amount Drawn (SDR Million) 220.10 220.10 237.52

Projected Payments to the Fund (SDR million; based on existing use of resources and present holdings of SDRs)
Forthcoming 2013 Principal Charges/interest Total 3.45 0.02 3.47 2014 23.09 0.08 23.17 2015 43.44 0.61 44.05 2016 49.88 0.50 50.38 2017 47.32 0.37 47.69

Formerly PRGF.

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Implementation of HIPC Initiative


Enhanced Framework Commitment of HIPC assistance Decision point date Assistance committed (1999 NPV terms) By all creditors (US$ million) Of which: Fund assistance (US$ million) (SDR equivalent in millions) Completion point date Disbursement of IMF assistance (SDR million) Assistance disbursed to Zambia Interim assistance Completion point balance Additional disbursements of interest income Total Disbursement
3 2

Dec. 2000 2,499.20 602.00 468.80 April 2005

468.80 351.60 117.20 39.47 508.27

Implementation of MDRI Assistance


I. Total debt relief (SDR million)4 Of which: II. MDRI HIPC Debt relief by facility (SDR million) Delivery date January 2006 GRA n/a PRGT 402.59 Total 402.59 402.59 398.47 4.12

2 3

Net present value (NPV) terms at the decision point under the enhanced framework.

Under the enhanced framework, an additional disbursement is made at the completion point corresponding to interest income earned on the amount committed at the decision point but not disbursed during the interim period. The Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) provides 100 percent debt relief to eligible member countries that are qualified for assistance. The debt relief covers all debt owed to the Fund as of end-2004 that is outstanding at the time the member qualifies for the relief.
4

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND 3

ZAMBIA

Safeguard Assessments Safeguards assessments of the Bank of Zambia (BoZ) were completed in June 2004, January 2009, and October 2010. The 2009 assessment concluded that the bank had adequate safeguards in several areas, but confirmed the existence of certain vulnerabilities in the BoZs legal framework and financial reporting. The 2010 update report concluded that the BoZ had made progress in implementing safeguards recommendations. Staff noted improvements in the internal audit and internal control mechanisms. Weak statutory independence remains a substantive safeguards concern. Exchange Rate Arrangement The currency of Zambia is the kwacha. The exchange rate arrangement is a float, with the kwacha exchange rate determined in the interbank market. The buying rate of the BoZ is a simple average of the primary dealers low bid rates, and the BoZs selling rate is the simple average of the primary dealers high offer rates. On April 19, 2002, Zambia accepted the obligations of Article VIII, Sections 2, 3, and 4 of the Articles of Agreement. On June 25, 2013, the Zambian authorities issued Statutory Instrument 55 of 2013, which regulates the monitoring of foreign exchange transactions. Among the measures included are two that give rise to exchange restrictions subject to Fund approval under Article VIII, Section 2(a). The first exchange restriction arises from the requirement that a person making payments of dividends in foreign exchange to a foreign bank account or nonresident person provide a tax clearance certificate and evidence of payment of corporate or income tax. The measure gives rise to an exchange restriction subject to IMF approval under Article VIII, Section 2(a) because it imposes limitations on the availability of foreign exchange for the making of payments of current international transactions based on noncompliance with obligations that are unrelated to the proposed transaction. The second exchange restriction arises from the requirement that a person making payments for royalties, management fees, technical fees, commissions or consultancy fees in foreign exchange to a foreign bank account or nonresident person be accompanied by evidence of corporate tax payments. This measure similarly gives rise to an exchange restriction subject to IMF approval under Article VIII, Section 2(a) because it imposes limitations on the availability of foreign exchange for the making of payments of current international transactions based on noncompliance with obligations that are unrelated to the proposed transaction. The authorities have assured staff that SI55 will be amended to remove these restrictions before the Board Meeting for the 2013 Article IV consultation. Further, Zambia continues to maintain an exchange restriction, which is subject to Fund approval under Article VIII, arising from limitations imposed by the government on access to foreign exchange for the making of payments and transfers for current international transactions, which is evidenced by the existence of external payments arrears accumulated prior to October 4, 1985. Staff noted progress towards resolving these arrears.

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

ZAMBIA

Article IV Consultations Zambia is on the standard 12-month Article IV consultation cycle, subject to Decision No. 14747 (10/96), as amended. The Executive Board concluded the last Article IV consultation on June 13, 2012. FSAP Participation and ROSC Zambia has participated in the financial sector assessment program (FSAP); an FSAP mission from the Fund and the World Bank conducted a comprehensive external assessment of the financial system April 30May 15, 2002, and July 1526, 2002. A mission from the Fund and the World Bank conducted a follow up FSAP in November 2008. The fiscal transparency module of a Report on Observance of Standards and Codes (ROSC) assessing compliance with the IMFs Code of Good Practices on Fiscal TransparencyDeclaration of Principles was issued to the Executive Board on October 31, 2001. A ROSC data module was issued to the Executive Board on January 18, 2005.

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ZAMBIA

Technical Assistance (since 2003) Resident advisors


Department FAD Dates 200203 201213 MCM 201115 Position Advisor on public expenditure management Peripatetic advisor on mining tax administration Advisor on capacity building at the Bank of Zambia

Technical assistance missions


Department MFD Dates January and May 2003 Purpose Development of foreign exchange interbank market, monetary operations, and reform of the financial system September 2003 Monetary operations, reform of the financial system, government securities market, and payments system AprilOctober 2004 AprilMay 2005 March 2006 MCM March 2009 September 2007 September 2007 November 2007 July 2008 July 2009 November 2011 January 2012 January 2012 January 2012 February 2012 March 2012 May 2012 Resolution of nonbank financial institutions (three missions) Liquidity management operations Liquidity management, monetary and exchange rate policies Contingency planning and lender of last resort Institutional arrangements and operation of the foreign exchange market. Foreign exchange market Risk-based supervision Bank restructuring Debt management strategy Monetary policy framework Inflation targeting framework Payments system reforms Central Bank organizational restructuring Currency management Macro modeling of transmission mechanism Stress testing and risk profile of banks

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ZAMBIA

Department

Dates May 2012 July 2012 September 2012 October 2012 November 2012 November 2012 December 2012 February 2013 March 2013 March 2013 May 2013 June 2013 August 2013 September 2013

Purpose Currency management Payments system Currency management Inflation targeting Organization review Financial stability Bank supervision and regulations Information handling Organization of economic analysis Macro modeling of transmission mechanism Payments system Markets for government securities Financial stability analysis Liquidity forecasting and interbank market Data ROSC Monetary statistics (GDDS) Government finance statistics (GDDS) Real sector (GDDS) Real sector (GDDS) Monetary and financial statistics Consumer price index Government finance statistics SRF data development Regulations for the Public Finance Act Fiscal regime for copper mining Revenue administration Follow up on fiscal arrangements for the mining sector Review of tax policy Tax administration Tax administration Tax administration Public financial management

STA

June 2004 AprilMay 2005 May 2005 February 2006 July 2006 April 2008 January 2009 April 2010 February 2013

FAD

JulyAugust 2005 November 2005 July 2006 August 2006 October 2006 June 2008 November 2008 January 2009 April 2009

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND 7

ZAMBIA

Department

Dates November 2009 February 2010 June 2010 August 2010 September 2010 February 2012 April 2012 October 2012 April 2013 July 2012 November 2013 November 2013

Purpose Tax administration Tax administration Public financial management Tax policy Public financial management Mining tax administration Public financial management Tax administration Pension reform Tax policy Tax administration Public financial management Assistance on amending legislation on nonbank financial institutions Strengthening the regulatory framework for nonbank financial institutions

LEG

August 2004 February 2005 May 2005

Resident Representative A Fund Resident Representative first took up the position in Lusaka in June 1990. Mr. Tobias Rasmussen has been the Resident Representative since January 2013.

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ZAMBIA

JOINT WORLD BANK-FUND WORK PROGRAM, 201314


Title Products Expected Delivery Date

World Bank work program in next 12 months

1. Two Economic Briefs with the first focused on Trade and the second on Financial Inclusion 2. Paper on non-concessional borrowing limits 3. Poverty maps 4. Diagnostic trade integration study 5. TA on Pay Policy Reform 6. TA to Zambia Mining Sector Governance Reform including EITI 7. Risk-based supervision TA 8. Financial stability TA with BoZ 9. South-South knowledge exchange with Chile 10. Analytical work on decentralization 11. PFM reform program (TA project worth about $30 million)

March 2014 and September 2014 November 2014 June 2014 January 2014 January 2014 Continuous June 2014 June 2014 February 2014 August/September 2014 Ongoing Ongoing Ongoing February 2014 September 2014

IMF work program in next 12 months

1. Technical assistance: tax administration peripatetic advisor to the Zambia Revenue Authority 2. Technical assistance: Central bank capacity building resident advisor to the Bank of Zambia 3. Staff visit 4. 2014 Article IV mission

Fund request to Bank Bank request to Fund Joint products in next 12 months 1. Medium-term macroeconomic framework

1. DSA 2. Monthly meetings with the Bank of Zambia

September 2014 Continuous

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND 9

ZAMBIA

STATISTICAL ISSUES
As of November 20, 2013
I. Assessment of Data Adequacy for Surveillance General: Data provision has some shortcomings, but is broadly adequate for surveillance. Issues with source data and compilation affect most datasets, but are particularly problematic in the national accounts, balance of payments, and fiscal reporting. National accounts: There is a high degree of uncertainty attached to estimates of the level and growth rate of real GDP, because 1994 is the latest benchmark year for value-added ratios to estimate GDP under the production approach. For many important industry areas, such as wholesale and retail trade, construction, business services, and many other service industries, (consisting mainly of small-scale private service providers) no appropriate indicators exist. Data on total production and intermediate consumption of establishments are not available. On the expenditure side, no reliable indicators of household consumption exist and private final consumption expenditure is derived as a residual. Source data for estimating gross fixed capital formation and changes in stocks are incomplete. There is also lack of high frequency real sector data to support a more flexible monetary management. The situation largely reflects resource constraints and organizational weakness within the Central Statistical Office that have affected its ability to produce economic statistics on a timely basis. Price statistics: The CPI broadly adheres to international methodological standards. The classification system used for compilation closely follows the Classification of Individual Consumption by Purpose. With STA technical assistance, a new CPI series with updated weights based on the latest household budget survey was released in February 2012. Government finance statistics: Data provision is broadly adequate for surveillance purposes. The transactional coverage of these data is however limited to government operations and transactions in nonfinancial assets. Data on transactions in financial assets and liabilities are still unavailable. The authorities report monthly budget releases data to AFR for operational use in a timely manner, but the data are often subject to substantial revisions, and data on extra-budgetary institutions and local governments are not available. The consolidation of fiscal outturn between fiscal reports and government accounts in monetary data requires significant improvement. Monetary statistics: Data provision is broadly adequate for surveillance purposes. Since the 2005 monetary and financial statistics mission, there has been a noticeable improvement in the quality of monetary accounts compiled and reported in accordance with the standardized report forms (SRFs) for the BoZ and other depository corporations (ODCs).

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Balance of payments statistics: Data sources and compilation methods still need to be improved (some items are estimated without reference to current source data). Resources available for balance of payments compilation have been increased, but are still inadequate, while coordination between the BoZ and CSO had improved. As a result, gaps in data remain in many areas including reinvested earnings, trade in services, and the financial account (including export proceeds held abroad by mining and nontraditional exporters). While the source data are generally adequate in terms of timeliness, they fall short in terms of coverage. As a result, indirect estimation methods are used, some of which have remained unchanged for many years and are out of date. Source data on private sector foreign assets and liabilities are insufficient to compile an International Investment Position statement. External and domestic debt statistics: Data provision is broadly adequate for surveillance purposes. Recent efforts, facilitated by technical assistance, have led to an improvement in the consolidation of the debt databases, both in terms of external and domestic debt. Further work is underway in these areas. II. Data Standards and Quality Zambia has participated in the General Data Dissemination System (GDDS) since November 2002. A Data ROSC Assessment was published in February 2005.

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ZAMBIA

Zambia: Table of Common Indicators Required for Surveillance As of November 12, 2013
Date of Latest Observation Exchange rates International reserve assets and reserve liabilities of the monetary authorities1 Reserve/base money Broad money Central bank balance sheet Consolidated balance sheet of the banking system Interest rates2 Consumer Price Index Revenue, expenditure, balance and composition of financing3general government4 Revenue, expenditure, balance and composition of financing3 central government Stocks of central government and central governmentguaranteed debt5 External current account balance Exports and imports of goods and services GDP/GNP Gross external debt International investment position 6
1 2 3 4

Date Received

Frequency of Data7 D D

Frequency of Reporting7 D W

Frequency of Publication7

Memo Items: Data Quality Methodological soundness8 Data Quality Accuracy and Reliability9

Nov. 12, 2013 Oct. 10, 2013

Nov. 12, 2013 Oct. 11, 2013

D M

Oct. 10, 2013 Sept. 2013 Sept. 2013 Sept. 2013

Oct. 11, 2013 Nov. 8, 2013 Nov. 8, 2013 Nov. 8, 2013

D M M M

W M M M

I M M M LO, LO, LO, LO LO, O, O, O, O

Sept. 2013 Oct 2013 NA

Nov. 8, 2013 Oct. 31, 2013

W M

W M

I M O, LO, O, LO LNO, LO, LO, LNO, LO

LO, LNO, LNO, LO Sept. 2013 Oct. 22, 2013 M M M

LNO, LO, O, O, LNO

Aug. 31, 2013

Sept. 23, 2013

Q3 2013 Sept. 2013 2012 Aug. 2013 NA

Nov. 11, 2013 Oct. 31, 2013 July 10, 2013 Sept. 22, 2013 NA

Q M A I

Q M A I

A M A I

LO, LNO, LNO, O

LNO, O, LNO, LO, LNO

LO, LO, LO, LO

LNO, LO, LNO, LNO, LNO

Includes reserve assets pledged or otherwise encumbered as well as net derivative positions. Both market-based and officially determined, including discounts rates, money market rates, rates on treasury bills, notes and bonds. Foreign, domestic bank, and domestic nonbank financing. The general government consists of the central government (budgetary funds, extra budgetary funds, and social security funds) and state and local Including currency and maturity composition. Includes external gross financial asset and liability positions vis--vis nonresidents. Daily (D), weekly (W), monthly (M), quarterly (Q), annually (A); irregular (I); or not available (NA). Reflects the assessment provided in the data ROSC, published February 1, 2005, and based on the findings of the mission that took place during

governments.
5 6 7 8

May 18June 3, 2004 for the dataset corresponding to the variable in each row. The assessment indicates whether international standards concerning (respectively) concepts and definitions, scope, classification/sectorization, and basis for recording are fully observed (O), largely observed (LO), largely not observed (LNO), or not observed (NO).

12

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ZAMBIA
November 26, 2013

STAFF REPORT FOR THE 2013 ARTICLE IV CONSULTATIONDEBT SUSTAINABILITY ANALYSIS

Approved By

David Owen and Chris Lane (IMF) and Jeffrey D. Lewis and Marcelo Giugale (IDA)

Prepared by: International Monetary Fund and International Development Association

Based on the Joint Fund-Bank Debt Sustainability Framework for Low-income Countries (LIC DSA), Zambias risk of external debt distress remains low as all debt indicators stay below the indicative policy thresholds throughout the projection period (20132033). Under the baseline and alternative scenarios, all external debt sustainability indicators remain below their applicable thresholds. The public DSA suggests that, under the baseline, Zambias overall public sector debt dynamics would be sustainable. However, besides sound macroeconomic policies, strong debt management, a higher diversification of the export base, and project appraisal capacity are needed to maintain debt sustainability in the face of a projected rise in non-concessional borrowing and potential external shocks.

ZAMBIA

BACKGROUND
1. Zambias stock of external and public debt remains relatively low. External public and publicly guaranteed (PPG) debt was about 18 percent of GPD in 2012 (US$3.7 billion).1, 2 The debts share related to multilaterals declined from 62 percent to 38 percent given the issuance of a Eurobond (US$750 million) in 2012. In this context, as of December 2012, the debts share owed to private banks/investors was 27 percent. Zambias total PPG debt also remains relatively low at 32.5 percent of GDP at end-2012.3

UNDERLYING DSA ASSUMPTIONS


2. In 2013, Zambias economic growth will be slightly lower than in 2012. GDP is projected to expand by 6.0 percent compared to 7.2 percent in 2012. This lower growth rate is related to a decline in the agriculture sector due to adverse weather conditions. GDP growth is being supported by a scale up of government investments. Inflation is projected at 7.5 percent. The external current account is projected to register a deficit of around 1.3 percent of GDP compared to a small surplus observed in 2012, mainly reflecting higher imports related to foreign direct investment activities and public sector investments. The higher imports more than offset a higher value of both copper and non-traditional exports compared to 2012. Reserve coverage, in terms of next years imports, are projected to decline from 2.7 to 2.3 months. Over the medium term, the baseline scenario assumes prudent economic policies to provide fiscal space for growth-enhancing investment while safeguarding macroeconomic stability. Inflation is expected to remain in single-digits; real economic growth will continue to be strong, supported by commodity exports, infrastructure investment, and expanded electricity generation capacity (Box 1).

Zambias stock of external debt declined substantially from about 86 percent of GDP in 2005 to around 9 percent in 2006 as a result of debt cancellation under the HIPC Initiative and MDRI. Authorities have revised the 2012 central governments debt stock from US$2.605 billion to US$2.954 billion. This change is mainly due to a reconciliation exercise with some creditors (mainly the EXIM bank of China by an amount of US$331 million). According to the authorities, disbursements of some loans went directly to the implementing agencies without informing the Ministry of Finances debt unit. PPG debt stock includes Central Government debt stock, IMF debt stock and 60 percent of ZESCOs debt stock. According to ZESCOs authorities, 60 percent of the debt is guaranteed by the government.
3 2

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Box 1. Baseline Macroeconomic Assumptions


Economic growth: Real GDP growth is assumed to pick up to about 7.7 percent in the medium term, supported by mining activity (copper exports are projected to increase by 70 percent between 2012 and 2018, from 0.9 million tons to 1.5 million tons, giving current production and investment plans), large infrastructure investment (capital expenditures are projected to increase from an estimate of 6.1 percent of GDP in 2013 to 8.8 percent of GDP in 2018), and increased electricity generation capacity. In the long run, the mining sector will remain important, but economic diversification in areas such as electricity generation, agriculture, and tourism is expected to support economic growth, which would be at around 5.0 percent annually. Inflation: The current objective of monetary policy is to reduce inflation to 6 percent or less. Prudent monetary and fiscal policies are expected to reduce annual inflation to around 5 percent in the medium term. External sector: Mining output is expected to show an average increase of 10 percent in the medium term (between 2013 and 2018), and the copper price is assumed to stabilize at around US$3.3 per pound in the long run. Copper, whose exports have been particularly strong in 2010 and 2011, will remain Zambias most important export (between 65 and 70 percent of total exports in the medium term). However, growth of nontraditional exports are projected to be 1723 percent over the medium term, and then stabilize at around 10-11 percent in the long run, consistent with higher non-mining output growth and infrastructure expenditure. Foreign direct investment (FDI) is expected to rise in the medium term to around 7.7 percent of GDP, concentrated in the mining, manufacturing, and transport sectors, but then stabilize in the long run at around 4.5 percent of GDP. The current account balance is projected to be roughly balanced by 2018 and to register a deficit of around 1 percent of GDP in the long term. Government revenue and expenditure: In line with staff recommendations, fiscal policy is assumed to be geared toward creating space for spending needs to enhance the economic diversification of Zambia. To this end, higher revenue will be mobilized through improvements in tax administration, especially with respect to the VAT and mining taxes, and new tax policy measures that would broaden the tax base (reduction of tax incentives and exemptions and some change in tax rates). As a result, revenues would rise gradually from 20.9 percent of GDP in 2013 to 24.8 percent by 2018. Primary expenditures would increase in the near term (reaching 27 percent of GDP), mainly due to the growthcritical infrastructure investment and spending on education and health, but are then expected to stabilize at about 26 percent of GDP, with current spending contained. Government financing: Net external financing is expected to decline from 5.0 percent of GDP in 2014 to 2.0 percent of GDP by 2018. External finance will be used to finance social and capital spending. This amount includes the issuance of sovereign debt (Eurobonds). However, net external financing is expected to decline to around 1.0 percent of GDP over the long-term. It is also assumed that the repayment of Eurobonds would be done through roll-overs.

3.

The baseline scenario assumes new public external borrowing on the order of US$6.2 billion

between 2013 and 2018. Of this amount, around US$3.9 billion is expected to come through Eurobond issuances. These Eurobonds are expected to incur interest at a constant spread from WEO global assumptions on the 10 year US Treasury bond of about 5 percentage points. The significant reliance on Eurobond financing in this scenario raises rollover risks and exposure to potential tightening of liquidity

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conditions in international markets. Moreover, another US$650 million would be on commercial terms.4 It is assumed that the proportion of borrowing under commercial terms, excluding the proceeds of the Eurobonds, would gradually increase from 21 percent in the medium term to above 65 percent by 2033. 4. The behavior of the grant element of new borrowing is erratic mainly due to assumptions

on rollover of Eurobonds. Issuances are projected to happen between 2014 and 2018. Also, it is assumed that roll-overs would be in place to repay the 2012 issuance and the ones between 2014 and 2018. Under the new discount factor of 5 percent, the grant element of new borrowing (GENB) would be around 56 percent in 2013, excluding the syndicated loan, and gradually declines over time until 2022 when the first rollover of the 2012 Eurobond is assumed to take place.
Evolution of Selected Macroeconomic Indicators 2013 Real Growth Previous DSA Current DSA Inflation (Average) Previous DSA Current DSA 2014 2015 2016 (Percentage Change) 8.0 7.5 5.0 6.0 (Percent of GDP) Fiscal Balance Previous DSA Current DSA Net External Financing Previous DSA Current DSA Current Account Balance Previous DSA Current DSA -2.5 -8.6 1.3 1.7 2.6 -1.3 -2.4 -6.3 1.3 5.0 2.9 -0.6 -2.5 -5.7 1.4 3.5 3.0 -0.4 -2.4 -5.2 1.4 3.2 3.4 -0.2 -2.2 -4.2 1.1 2.8 3.6 0.0 7.9 7.6 5.0 5.2 2017

8.3 6.0 5.2 7.1

7.8 7.3 5.0 7.0

7.7 7.6 5.0 5.0

Out of the US$650 million, US$250 million would correspond to a syndicated loan. Also, it is assumed that US$1.7 billion would come mainly from sources such as the World Bank, African Development Bank and China Exim Bank. It is also assumed that Zambia will be able to access the non-concessional window of the World Bank and AfDB by 2020. In addition, it is assumed that the degree of concessionality from the China Exim banks loans would be lower than 35 percent in the medium-term projection.

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PUBLIC INVESTMENT AND GROWTH


5. The impact of new borrowing to finance public infrastructure investment on debt sustainability depends critically on its impact on growth. A number of empirical studies generally find a positive impact of public investment on growth both through a direct impact on economic activity and through spillover effects on private investment.5 Among these studies, Burnside and Dollar (1997) found that a sustained increase in grant-financed investment by one percent of GDP raised real GDP growth in low-income countries with good policy implementation on a sustained basis by about 0.4 percentage points. 6 Gupta et al. (2011) find that the unadjusted output elasticity of public capital would be 0.25 (however, the marginal product of (unadjusted) capital would be around 0.5).7 Also, the growth impact of public investment on growth is affected by how it is financed. Aschauer (2000) found that external debt financing of public investment could reduce the impact on growth, depending on the quality and effective use of the investment, as well as the financing costs.8 6. The baseline scenario projects an increase in capital expenditure in the medium term. The

capital expenditure to GDP ratio would increase from 6.6 percent in 2013 to 8.6 percent in 2018. Between 14 and 18 percent of such increase is assumed to be financed with external borrowing, with a mix of concessional and non-concessional resources. Based on the empirical studies mentioned above, the projected increase in capital expenditure would raise real GDP growth by 0.5 percentage points over the medium term.

Romp, W. and J. de Haan (2007), Public Capital and Economic Growth: A Critical Survey, Perspektiven der Wirtschaftspolitik 8, 1140 presents a survey on this topic. Burnside, Craig, and David Dollar (1997), Aid Spurs Growth in a Sound Policy Environment. Finance and Development, December 1997. The authors present an alternative measure of efficiency-adjusted capital for which the output elasticity would be around 0.15. Aschauer, D.A. (2000), Do states optimise? Public capital and economic growth. The Annals of Regional Science, (34), pp. 343-363.
8

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EXTERNAL DEBT SUSTAINABILITY


Baseline scenario 7. External debt burden indicators rise in the medium term, but are expected to remain below

the indicative policy thresholds (Figure 1 and Table 1).9 The stock of external public and publicly guaranteed (PPG) debt is expected to rise to almost 23 percent of GDP by 2017 but gradually decline thereafter. The present value (PV) of PPG debt to GDP increases to about 20 percent by 2017 before declining to 10 percent by 2033, well below the 40 percent threshold.10 The PV of debt to exports increases to almost 37 percent by 2017, and falls gradually thereafter, remaining well below the threshold of 150 percent. The PV of PPG debt to revenue increases from 63 percent in 2012 to about 89 percent in 2016 and then starts to fall, remaining below the threshold of 250 percent.11 Stress test 8. External debt sustainability is maintained under all stress tests. However, the PV of PPG debt

to GDP ratio almost reaches the threshold in 2015 and 2016 under the export shock (Table 3 and Figure 3).12 The PV of the PPG debt to GDP ratio reaches a higher level by 2023 compared to the results of the other stress tests. This scenario illustrates Zambias vulnerability to copper price and copper output volatility and the need to diversify its export base. 9. External debt indicators would deteriorate, but remain below their respective thresholds,

under an alternative high investment-low growth scenario. This scenario assumes that there are constraints in the appraisal, selection and project implementation capacity of public investment projects in the medium term, which are not mitigated through the implementation of PFM reforms. In this context and
9

The World Banks Country Policy and Institutions Assessment (CPIA) ranks Zambia as a medium performer (the average 201012 CPIA score is 3.45). Thus, the external debt burden thresholds for Zambia are (i) a PV of debt-toGDP at 40 percent; (ii) a PV of debt-to-exports at 150 percent; (iii) a PV of debt-to-revenue at 250 percent; (iv) a debt service-to-exports at 20 percent; and (v) a debt service-to-revenue at 20 percent.
10
11

Present Values (PV) are calculated based on a 5 percent annual discount.

The large residuals in Table 1 are caused by the fact that the official balance of payments statistics for Zambia show the (mostly foreign owned) mining companies as keeping a large share of their mining export proceeds as rapidly increasing deposits abroad.
12

Care is needed with the interpretation of the export shock in the case of Zambia. Given that not all the copper export proceeds return to the country because most mine companies are foreign-owned, the assumption under the export shock that losses in export proceeds are compensated with external debt is overestimating the impact of the shock. Staff estimates that at least 40 percent of copper exports do not return to the country. The shock is defined as the export value growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 20142015.

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based on the discussion provided in paragraphs 4 and 5, real GDP growth would remain about 0.5 percentage points below the baseline in the medium and long term. In addition, we assume that the decline in GDP growth will have a negative impact on export growth, in particular for non-traditional exports, due to lower infrastructure capacity (for the purpose of this exercise it is assumed that the calculated decline in GDP growth would reduce the exports-to-GDP ratio by two percentage points in the medium term and one percentage point in the long term). The lower growth would result in lower domestic revenues and a higher financing requirement that are assumed to be met by additional external borrowing on commercial terms. The additional financing would rise to about 1 percent of GDP in the medium term. Under this scenario, the ratio of the PV of PPG debt-to-GDP increases by 11 percentage points by 2018 compared to the baseline but remains below the threshold.

PUBLIC DEBT SUSTAINABILITY


Baseline scenario 10. Zambias public debt rises slightly in the medium term, but declines gradually over time,

assuming that the government will implement front-loaded fiscal adjustment. Under the baseline assumptions, the PV of public debt to GDP ratio would reach levels of about 37 percent in the mediumterm and then comes down to about 32 percent by 2033. Stress test 11. Risks to public debt dynamics come mainly from the possibility of a failure to implement

front-loaded fiscal adjustment and negative shocks to GDP growth. The results under the fixed primary balance scenario (holding the primary balance unchanged at the 2013 value) underscores the negative effects on public debt sustainability of not maintaining fiscal discipline over the medium term (Figure 2 and Table 2). This scenario reinforces staff recommendations for undertaking a front-loaded fiscal consolidation path. Under this scenario, PV of debt-to- GDP ratio and PV of debt-to-revenue ratio keep rising over time. Regarding the bound tests, risk would mainly come from lower GDP growth. This risk underscores both the need for Zambia to diversify its production structure to mitigate vulnerabilities related to potential declines in mining production in the long term and to improve public investment management in order to ensure productivity-enhancing investments.

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CONCLUSIONS
12. Zambia is considered at low risk of debt distress. The external debt indicators remain below their thresholds in the baseline scenario and bound tests. The public debt DSA also suggests that Zambias overall public sector debt dynamics would be sustainable under the baseline scenario. On the other hand, the fixed primary balance scenario demonstrates the need for an improved fiscal position. Finally, in addition to sound macroeconomic policies and debt management strengthening, developing project appraisal capacity and diversification of the export base are needed in order to maintain productivityenhancing investments and debt sustainability in the face of access to international markets and a gradual increase in non-concessional borrowing.

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Figure 1. Zambia: Indicators of Public and Publicly Guaranteed External Debt under Alternatives Scenarios, 2013-2033 1/
6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 2013 2018 2023 2028 2033
Rate of Debt Accumulation Grant-equivalent financing (% of GDP) Grant element of new borrowing (% right scale)

a. Debt Accumulation

45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 -10

45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 2013

b.PV of debt-to GDP ratio

2018

2023

2028

2033

160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 2013

c.PV of debt-to-exports ratio

300 250 200 150 100 50 0

d.PV of debt-to-revenue ratio

2018

2023

2028

2033

2013

2018

2023

2028

2033

25 20 15 10 5 0 2013

e.Debt service-to-exports ratio

25 20 15 10 5 0 2013

f.Debt service-to-revenue ratio

2018
Baseline

2023

2028

2033

2018
Threshold

2023

2028

2033

Historical scenario

Most extreme shock 1/

Higher investment-Lower growth

Sources: Country authorities; and staff estimates and projections.


1/ The most extreme stress test is the test that yields the highest ratio in 2023. In figure b. it corresponds to an Exports shock; in c. to a Exports shock; in d. to a Exports shock; in e. to a Exports shock and in figure f. to a Exports shock

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Figure 2.Zambia: Indicators of Public Debt Under Alternative Scenarios, 2013-2033 1/


Baseline Fix Primary Balance Most extreme shock Growth Historical scenario

120 100 80 60 40 20 0 -20 -40 2013 500 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033

PV of Debt-to-GDP Ratio

PV of Debt-to-Revenue Ratio 2/
400 300 200 100 0 -100 -200 2013 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 2013 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033

Debt Service-to-Revenue Ratio

Sources: Country authorities; and staff estimates and projections. 1/ The most extreme stress test is the test that yields the highest ratio in 2023. 2/ Revenues are defined inclusive of grants.

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INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

Table 1.: External Debt Sustainability Framework, Baseline Scenario, 2010-2033 1/


(In percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated) Actual 2010 External debt (nominal) 1/ of which: public and publicly guaranteed (PPG) Change in external debt Identified net debt-creating flows Non-interest current account deficit Deficit in balance of goods and services Exports Imports Net current transfers (negative = inflow) of which: official Other current account flows (negative = net inflow) Net FDI (negative = inflow) Endogenous debt dynamics 2/ Contribution from nominal interest rate Contribution from real GDP growth Contribution from price and exchange rate changes Residual (3-4) 3/ of which: exceptional financing PV of external debt 4/ In percent of exports PV of PPG external debt In percent of exports In percent of government revenues Debt service-to-exports ratio (in percent) PPG debt service-to-exports ratio (in percent) PPG debt service-to-revenue ratio (in percent) Total gross financing need (Billions of U.S. dollars) Non-interest current account deficit that stabilizes debt ratio Key macroeconomic assumptions Real GDP growth (in percent) GDP deflator in US dollar terms (change in percent) Effective interest rate (percent) 5/ Growth of exports of G&S (US dollar terms, in percent) Growth of imports of G&S (US dollar terms, in percent) Grant element of new public sector borrowing (in percent) Government revenues (excluding grants, in percent of GDP) Aid flows (in Billions of US dollars) 7/ of which: Grants of which: Concessional loans Grant-equivalent financing (in percent of GDP) 8/ Grant-equivalent financing (in percent of external financing) 8/ Memorandum items: Nominal GDP (Billions of US dollars) Nominal dollar GDP growth PV of PPG external debt (in Billions of US dollars) (PVt-PVt-1)/GDPt-1 (in percent) Gross workers' remittances (Billions of US dollars) PV of PPG external debt (in percent of GDP + remittances) PV of PPG external debt (in percent of exports + remittances) Debt service of PPG external debt (in percent of exports + remittances) Sources: Country authorities; and staff estimates and projections. 1/ Includes both public and private sector external debt. 2/ Derived as [r - g - (1+g)]/(1+g++g) times previous period debt ratio, with r = nominal interest rate; g = real GDP growth rate, and = growth rate of GDP deflator in U.S. dollar terms. 3/ Includes exceptional financing (i.e., changes in arrears and debt relief); changes in gross foreign assets; and valuation adjustments. For projections also includes contribution from price and exchange rate changes. 4/ Assumes that PV of private sector debt is equivalent to its face value. 5/ Current-year interest payments divided by previous period debt stock. 6/ Historical averages and standard deviations are generally derived over the past 10 years, subject to data availability. 7/ Defined as grants, concessional loans, and debt relief. 8/ Grant-equivalent financing includes grants provided directly to the government and through new borrowing (difference between the face value and the PV of new debt). 7.6 17.5 1.1 69.4 37.2 ... 17.8 0.3 0.3 0.1 ... ... 16.2 26.4 6.8 11.0 1.3 16.9 33.7 ... 20.9 0.3 0.1 0.2 ... ... 19.2 18.6 7.2 0.0 1.8 9.4 21.8 ... 21.0 0.5 0.3 0.1 ... ... 20.6 7.2 2.7 0.1 13.3 27.5 2.7 6.2 12.7 2.1 27.9 20.7 ... 0.8 16.3 2.3 29.0 18.1 ... 6.0 3.4 2.6 15.0 17.7 27.9 19.9 0.5 0.2 0.3 1.6 50.0 22.6 9.7 3.0 1.4 0.1 13.4 26.6 1.8 7.3 5.5 3.3 17.4 15.7 -4.1 20.6 0.6 0.4 0.2 1.2 18.4 25.6 13.1 4.2 5.4 0.1 16.8 32.1 2.3 7.5 3.2 3.9 14.0 12.1 1.3 21.2 0.7 0.4 0.3 1.4 25.4 28.3 10.9 5.2 3.6 0.1 18.4 34.2 2.7 7.6 3.0 4.1 12.6 11.4 0.6 21.9 0.7 0.4 0.3 1.2 23.9 31.4 10.8 6.1 3.2 0.1 19.5 35.7 3.1 7.6 3.2 4.2 11.6 11.0 1.3 22.8 0.6 0.3 0.3 1.0 23.4 34.9 11.1 7.0 2.8 0.1 20.1 36.5 3.1 7.7 3.2 4.2 11.3 11.2 7.5 24.0 0.6 0.3 0.3 1.0 31.4 38.8 11.1 7.5 1.7 0.1 19.6 35.6 2.8 7.3 3.6 3.7 13.6 13.2 5.7 6.2 3.2 3.4 9.3 9.6 30.9 24.0 0.4 0.1 0.3 0.5 46.7 63.0 9.6 8.0 0.2 0.2 12.7 23.4 1.8 5.0 3.2 3.1 7.4 7.6 5.8 24.0 0.5 0.1 0.4 0.2 7.7 142.8 8.3 14.3 1.3 0.3 10.1 20.8 2.2 5.7 3.2 3.3 8.2 8.8 13.4 24.0 20.6 10.0 -8.0 -17.0 -7.3 -12.8 47.7 34.9 -2.7 -1.5 8.2 -3.9 -5.7 0.2 -1.7 -4.2 9.0 0.0 ... ... ... ... ... 3.9 0.6 1.7 -1.5 0.7 2011 20.1 11.4 -0.5 -12.7 -3.9 -7.7 47.0 39.3 -2.0 -0.8 5.8 -5.8 -3.0 0.2 -1.2 -2.0 12.2 0.0 ... ... ... ... ... 2.1 0.4 1.0 -1.7 -3.4 2012 22.4 18.0 2.3 -9.8 -0.4 -3.3 48.0 44.7 -2.2 -0.7 5.1 -8.4 -1.0 0.3 -1.4 0.0 12.2 0.0 17.7 37.0 13.3 27.7 63.2 5.5 2.8 6.3 -1.3 -2.7 Historical Average
6/ 6/

Standard Deviation

Projections
2013-2018 2019-2033

2013 22.8 18.1 0.4 -7.9 0.8 -2.3 50.3 48.0 -2.1 -0.7 5.2 -8.0 -0.7 0.5 -1.2 8.3 0.0 18.2 36.2 13.5 26.8 67.5 3.6 1.9 4.7 -1.2 0.4

2014 26.0 20.7 3.1 -8.7 0.0 -3.1 52.2 49.0 -2.3 -1.0 5.4 -7.8 -0.8 0.7 -1.5 11.8 0.0 22.1 42.4 16.9 32.3 82.1 3.8 2.3 5.9 -1.5 -3.2

2015 27.9 22.0 2.0 -9.3 -0.5 -4.1 53.6 49.6 -2.0 -0.8 5.5 -7.9 -0.8 0.9 -1.8 11.2 0.0 24.4 45.6 18.5 34.5 87.0 4.1 2.8 7.0 -1.8 -2.5

2016 29.3 22.8 1.3 -9.6 -0.9 -4.7 54.5 49.8 -1.8 -0.7 5.6 -7.8 -0.9 1.0 -1.9 10.9 0.0 26.0 47.8 19.6 35.9 89.3 4.6 3.1 7.8 -1.9 -2.2

2017 30.1 23.1 0.9 -9.8 -1.1 -5.0 54.8 49.8 -1.6 -0.6 5.5 -7.8 -0.9 1.1 -2.0 10.6 0.0 27.1 49.5 20.1 36.7 88.1 4.5 3.1 7.4 -2.2 -1.9

2018 30.1 22.6 -0.1 -9.9 -1.3 -5.0 54.9 49.8 -1.4 -0.5 5.2 -7.7 -1.0 1.1 -2.1 9.8 0.0 27.1 49.4 19.6 35.8 81.9 4.3 2.8 6.4 -2.6 -1.2

Average

2023 23.8 15.9 -1.1 -8.4 -1.1 -4.6 54.4 49.8 -0.5 -0.2 4.1 -6.6 -0.6 0.8 -1.4 7.3 0.0 20.7 38.0 12.8 23.5 53.2 3.2 1.8 4.2 -3.8 0.0

2033 18.9 12.4 0.3 -4.0 0.7 -0.8 48.4 47.7 -0.1 0.0 1.6 -4.3 -0.3 0.5 -0.9 4.3 0.0 16.6 34.4 10.1 20.8 42.1 3.1 2.3 4.6 -3.0 0.4

Average

1.9

6.4

-0.6

-2.6

1.4

-0.4

-6.5

2.4

-5.9

0.3 23.1

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND 11

11.1 3.0

9.1 0.5

0.0 ... ... ...

0.0 ... ... ...

ZAMBIA

12 INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND


Public sector debt 1/ of which: foreign-currency denominated
Other Sustainability Indicators PV of public sector debt

ZAMBIA

Table 2.Zambia: Public Sector Debt Sustainability Framework, Baseline Scenario, 2010-2033
(In percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated)
Actual 2010 2011 2012 Average
5/

Standard Deviation

5/

Estimate 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

Projections 2013-18 2018 Average

2023

2019-33 2033 Average

24.5 10.0 -1.2 -1.0 1.3 19.6 1.8 20.9 -2.3 -1.7 0.2 -1.8 -0.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -0.2

26.6 11.4 2.1 -1.4 1.0 21.7 0.8 22.7 -2.4 -2.1 -0.5 -1.6 -0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 3.4

32.5 18.0 5.9 0.2 1.6 22.7 1.7 24.3 -1.4 -1.0 0.8 -1.8 -0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 5.7

35.7 18.1 3.2 5.2 6.8 20.9 1.0 27.7 -1.5 -1.2 0.6 -1.9 -0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -2.0

37.8 20.7 2.1 3.2 4.9 22.0 1.4 26.9 -1.7 -1.3 1.1 -2.4 -0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -1.1

39.1 22.0 1.3 2.2 3.6 22.5 1.3 26.2 -1.4 -1.1 1.5 -2.6 -0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -0.9

39.9 22.8 0.8 1.6 3.0 23.1 1.2 26.1 -1.4 -1.2 1.6 -2.8 -0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -0.8

39.9 23.1 0.0 0.8 2.3 23.8 1.0 26.1 -1.4 -1.2 1.6 -2.8 -0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -0.9

38.6 22.6 -1.2 -0.2 1.3 24.8 0.8 26.1 -1.5 -1.3 1.6 -2.8 -0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -1.1

34.5 15.9 -0.4 1.3 2.0 24.2 0.2 26.2 -0.7 -0.5 1.5 -2.0 ... 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -1.7

33.8 12.4 0.1 1.9 2.0 24.0 0.0 26.0 -0.1 0.0 1.6 -1.6 ... 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -1.8

Change in public sector debt Identified debt-creating flows Primary deficit Revenue and grants of which: grants Primary (noninterest) expenditure Automatic debt dynamics Contribution from interest rate/growth differential of which: contribution from average real interest rate of which: contribution from real GDP growth Contribution from real exchange rate depreciation Other identified debt-creating flows Privatization receipts (negative) Recognition of implicit or contingent liabilities Debt relief (HIPC and other) Other (specify, e.g. bank recapitalization) Residual, including asset changes

-2.1

7.0

3.6

1.9

of which: foreign-currency denominated of which: external PV of contingent liabilities (not included in public sector debt)
Gross financing need 2/ PV of public sector debt-to-revenue and grants ratio (in percent) PV of public sector debt-to-revenue ratio (in percent)

... ... ... ... 9.3 15.2 16.7 2.6

... ... ... ... 7.9 10.9 11.3 -1.0

27.8 13.3 13.3 ... 11.0 122.4 132.3 63.2 17.6 19.0 -4.4

31.1 13.5 13.5 ... 15.4 148.7 156.0 67.5 16.5 17.3 3.5

33.9 16.9 16.9 ... 15.6 154.4 165.1 82.1 20.3 21.7 2.9

35.6 18.5 18.5 ... 14.4 158.0 167.8 87.0 21.1 22.4 2.3

36.7 19.6 19.6 ... 14.0 159.1 167.6 89.3 21.2 22.4 2.2

36.9 20.1 20.1 ... 13.2 155.0 161.5 88.1 20.3 21.2 2.3

35.7 19.6 19.6 ... 11.8 143.8 148.7 81.9 18.4 19.0 2.5

31.4 12.8 12.8 ...

31.5 10.1 10.1 ...

of which: external 3/

Debt service-to-revenue and grants ratio (in percent) 4/ Debt service-to-revenue ratio (in percent) 4/ Primary deficit that stabilizes the debt-to-GDP ratio Key macroeconomic and fiscal assumptions Real GDP growth (in percent) Average nominal interest rate on forex debt (in percent) Average real interest rate on domestic debt (in percent) Real exchange rate depreciation (in percent, + indicates depreciation Inflation rate (GDP deflator, in percent) Growth of real primary spending (deflated by GDP deflator, in percen Grant element of new external borrowing (in percent)

12.9 15.1 129.6 131.3 130.9 131.5 53.2 42.1 17.8 21.4 18.0 2.4 21.5 1.9

7.6 0.6 1.7 -6.2 11.7 0.1 ...

6.8 0.9 -3.1 -3.1 12.5 0.2 ...

7.2 1.8 5.4 -3.3 5.9 0.1 ...

6.2 1.1 0.2 -7.7 13.7 0.1

0.8 0.6 2.9 11.2 4.6 0.1

6.0 2.4 3.4 -1.7 7.6 0.2 27.9

7.3 3.4 5.0 ... 7.2 0.0 -4.1

7.5 4.0 7.1 ... 5.9 0.0 1.3

7.6 4.4 7.1 ... 5.1 0.1 0.6

7.6 4.7 6.8 ... 5.0 0.1 1.3

7.7 4.8 6.6 ... 5.0 0.1 7.5

7.3 3.9 6.0

6.2 4.5 6.6

5.0 4.5 6.6

5.7 4.4 6.6

...

...

...

...

6.0 0.1 5.7

5.0 0.1 30.9

5.0 0.1 5.8

5.0 0.1 ...

Sources: Country authorities; and staff estimates and projections. 1/ [Indicate coverage of public sector, e.g., general government or nonfinancial public sector. Also whether net or gross debt is used.] 2/ Gross financing need is defined as the primary deficit plus debt service plus the stock of short-term debt at the end of the last period. 3/ Revenues excluding grants. 4/ Debt service is defined as the sum of interest and amortization of medium and long-term debt. 5/ Historical averages and standard deviations are generally derived over the past 10 years, subject to data availability.

ZAMBIA

Table 3.Zambia: Sensitivity Analysis for Key Indicators of Public and Publicly Guaranteed External Debt, 2013-2033
(In percent)

Projections
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2023 2033

PV of debt-to GDP ratio


Baseline A. Alternative Scenarios A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2013-2033 1/ A2. New public sector loans on less favorable terms in 2013-2033 2 A3. Alternative Scenario :[Higher investment-Lower growth] B. Bound Tests B1. Real GDP growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B2. Export value growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 3/ B3. US dollar GDP deflator at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B4. Net non-debt creating flows at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 4/ B5. Combination of B1-B4 using one-half standard deviation shocks B6. One-time 30 percent nominal depreciation relative to the baseline in 2014 5/ 13 13 13 13 13 13 17 25 18 21 22 23 19 40 21 27 28 26 20 40 23 28 29 27 21 39 23 28 29 28 20 38 23 27 28 27 13 24 15 17 18 18 10 12 12 11 11 14 13 13 13 19 17 19 23 19 22 27 21 25 30 23 27 31 23 29 29 17 24 10 15 22 13 17 18 20 20 20 13 10

PV of debt-to-exports ratio
Baseline A. Alternative Scenarios A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2013-2033 1/ A2. New public sector loans on less favorable terms in 2013-2033 2 A3. Alternative Scenario :[Higher investment-Lower growth] B. Bound Tests B1. Real GDP growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B2. Export value growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 3/ B3. US dollar GDP deflator at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B4. Net non-debt creating flows at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 4/ B5. Combination of B1-B4 using one-half standard deviation shocks B6. One-time 30 percent nominal depreciation relative to the baseline in 2014 5/ 27 27 27 27 27 27 32 56 32 41 42 32 34 102 34 51 53 34 36 100 36 51 54 36 36 98 36 51 54 36 35 94 35 49 52 35 23 61 23 32 34 23 21 34 21 22 23 21 27 27 27 37 32 37 44 36 43 49 39 48 54 41 52 57 41 54 53 30 45 21 32 47 27 32 34 36 37 36 23 21

PV of debt-to-revenue ratio
Baseline A. Alternative Scenarios A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2013-2033 1/ A2. New public sector loans on less favorable terms in 2013-2033 2 A3. Alternative Scenario :[Higher investment-Lower growth] B. Bound Tests B1. Real GDP growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B2. Export value growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 3/ B3. US dollar GDP deflator at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B4. Net non-debt creating flows at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 4/ B5. Combination of B1-B4 using one-half standard deviation shocks B6. One-time 30 percent nominal depreciation relative to the baseline in 2014 5/ 67 67 67 67 67 67 82 120 89 104 107 113 89 188 101 128 133 120 92 182 104 127 132 124 91 172 102 122 127 122 84 157 95 112 117 113 55 102 62 73 75 73 43 51 49 45 47 58 67 67 67 94 81 91 110 92 105 122 98 115 130 99 120 130 95 119 121 69 100 43 64 92 67 82 87 89 88 82 53 42

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

13

ZAMBIA

Table 3.Zambia: Sensitivity Analysis for Key Indicators of Public and Publicly Guaranteed External Debt, 2013-2033 (continued)
(In percent)

Debt service-to-exports ratio


Baseline A. Alternative Scenarios A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2013-2033 1/ A2. New public sector loans on less favorable terms in 2013-2033 2 A3. Alternative Scenario :[Higher investment-Lower growth] B. Bound Tests B1. Real GDP growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B2. Export value growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 3/ B3. US dollar GDP deflator at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B4. Net non-debt creating flows at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 4/ B5. Combination of B1-B4 using one-half standard deviation shocks B6. One-time 30 percent nominal depreciation relative to the baseline in 2014 5/ 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 3 5 3 3 3 3 3 7 3 4 4 3 3 6 3 4 4 3 3 6 3 3 4 3 2 7 2 3 3 2 2 4 2 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 3 3 2 4 3 3 4 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 4 5 2 2 3 3 3 3 2 2

Debt service-to-revenue ratio


Baseline A. Alternative Scenarios A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2013-2033 1/ A2. New public sector loans on less favorable terms in 2013-2033 2 A3. Alternative Scenario :[Higher investment-Lower growth] B. Bound Tests B1. Real GDP growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B2. Export value growth at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 3/ B3. US dollar GDP deflator at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 B4. Net non-debt creating flows at historical average minus one standard deviation in 2014-2015 4/ B5. Combination of B1-B4 using one-half standard deviation shocks B6. One-time 30 percent nominal depreciation relative to the baseline in 2014 5/ Memorandum item: Grant element assumed on residual financing (i.e., financing required above baseline) 6/ Sources: Country authorities; and staff estimates and projections. 1/ Variables include real GDP growth, growth of GDP deflator (in U.S. dollar terms), non-interest current account in percent of GDP, and non-debt creating flows. 2/ Assumes that the interest rate on new borrowing is by 2 percentage points higher than in the baseline., while grace and maturity periods are the same as in the baseline. 3/ Exports values are assumed to remain permanently at the lower level, but the current account as a share of GDP is assumed to return to its baseline level after the shock (implicitly assuming an offsetting adjustment in import levels). 4/ Includes official and private transfers and FDI. 5/ Depreciation is defined as percentage decline in dollar/local currency rate, such that it never exceeds 100 percent. 6/ Applies to all stress scenarios except for A2 (less favorable financing) in which the terms on all new financing are as specified in footnote 2. 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 8 7 9 8 8 8 10 8 12 9 10 10 11 8 11 9 9 9 10 7 10 7 8 8 9 4 11 5 7 7 6 5 6 5 5 5 6 5 5 5 6 6 6 7 5 7 8 6 9 8 6 9 7 6 8 7 6 8 5 7 10 5 6 7 8 7 6 4 5

14

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

ZAMBIA

Table 4.Zambia: Sensitivity Analysis for Key Indicators of Public Debt 2013-2033

Projections 2013 PV of Debt-to-GDP Ratio Baseline A. Alternative scenarios A1. Real GDP growth and primary balance are at historical averages A2. Primary balance is unchanged from 2013 A3. Permanently lower GDP growth 1/ B. Bound tests B1. B2. B3. B4. B5. Real GDP growth is at historical average minus one standard deviations in 2014-20 Primary balance is at historical average minus one standard deviations in 2014-201 Combination of B1-B2 using one half standard deviation shocks One-time 30 percent real depreciation in 2014 10 percent of GDP increase in other debt-creating flows in 2014 PV of Debt-to-Revenue Ratio 2/ Baseline A. Alternative scenarios A1. Real GDP growth and primary balance are at historical averages A2. Primary balance is unchanged from 2013 A3. Permanently lower GDP growth 1/ B. Bound tests B1. B2. B3. B4. B5. Real GDP growth is at historical average minus one standard deviations in 2014-20 Primary balance is at historical average minus one standard deviations in 2014-201 Combination of B1-B2 using one half standard deviation shocks One-time 30 percent real depreciation in 2014 10 percent of GDP increase in other debt-creating flows in 2014 Debt Service-to-Revenue Ratio 2/ Baseline A. Alternative scenarios A1. Real GDP growth and primary balance are at historical averages A2. Primary balance is unchanged from 2013 A3. Permanently lower GDP growth 1/ B. Bound tests B1. B2. B3. B4. B5. Real GDP growth is at historical average minus one standard deviations in 2014-20 Primary balance is at historical average minus one standard deviations in 2014-201 Combination of B1-B2 using one half standard deviation shocks One-time 30 percent real depreciation in 2014 10 percent of GDP increase in other debt-creating flows in 2014 17 17 17 17 17 21 20 21 22 20 22 21 21 24 23 22 21 19 25 28 22 21 19 24 22 20 19 18 22 21 20 18 18 21 21 27 22 25 27 23 17 17 17 20 20 20 20 22 21 16 23 21 15 23 21 13 23 19 8 28 19 -2 47 25 17 20 21 21 20 18 18 21 149 149 149 149 149 159 154 140 181 199 169 163 137 183 199 173 164 143 183 197 172 159 143 178 190 163 148 136 166 176 163 133 138 152 155 190 134 164 160 150 149 149 149 124 163 155 107 179 159 91 195 161 75 206 157 59 212 147 -13 276 140 -113 408 166 149 154 158 159 155 144 130 131 31 31 31 31 31 35 34 31 40 44 38 37 31 41 45 40 38 33 42 46 41 38 34 42 45 40 37 34 41 44 39 32 33 37 38 46 32 39 38 36 31 31 31 27 36 34 24 40 36 21 45 37 18 49 37 15 53 37 -3 67 34 -27 98 40 31 34 36 37 37 36 31 32 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2023 2033

Sources: Country authorities; and staff estimates and projections. 1/ Assumes that real GDP growth is at baseline minus one standard deviation divided by the square root of the length of the projection period. 2/ Revenues are defined inclusive of grants.

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

15

Press Release No. 13/535 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 19, 2013

International Monetary Fund Washington, D.C. 20431 USA

IMF Executive Board Concludes 2013 Article IV Consultation with Zambia On December 11, 2013, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Article IV consultation with Zambia. 1 Zambia has achieved strong and sustained economic growth over the past decade due to improved macroeconomic management and increased copper production; however, risks have over the past year increased with rising fiscal imbalances and lower reserve coverage. Robust output growth continued in 2012 at slightly above 7 percent, driven by agriculture and services, but is slowing in 2013 due to a weaker harvest. Expansionary fiscal policies, mainly from spending on subsidies and wages, have raised the projected 2013 deficit to about 8 percent of GDP. Rising imports together with weakened copper prices are expected to move the current account into deficit, and international reserve coverage has fallen to 2.3 months of next years imports. Inflation has remained contained as monetary policy has been gradually tightened. With the Central Bank having raised its policy rate in two steps of 25 basis points each, consumer price inflation is projected to stay broadly unchanged at 7 percent in 2013 despite the withdrawal of fuel and agricultural subsidies earlier this year, as well as the more recent increase in civil service wages. The nominal exchange rate has depreciated recently, but has remained broadly in line with inflation differentials to trading partners. The banking sector has grown steadily and remains profitable and well-capitalized. Private sector credit growth has started slowing down in 2013 from a rapid increase in the second half of 2012. Nonperforming loans declined to 8.2 percent of total loans in mid-2013 from 15 percent in 2010. Over the medium term, economic growth is expected to stay strong, averaging about 7 percent a year. However, this is premised on significant policy adjustment to restore
1

Under Article IV of the IMF's Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with members, usually every year. A staff team visits the country, collects economic and financial information, and discusses with officials the country's economic developments and policies. On return to headquarters, the staff prepares a report, which forms the basis for discussion by the Executive Board.

fiscal sustainability and preservation of the investment climate. The authorities are targeting a 3 percent of GDP deficit over the medium term with no more than 1 percent of GDP net domestic financing. In order to help achieve this, the government is planning a wage and net recruitment freeze for 2014 and is aiming to limit the cost of agricultural subsidies. The central bank aims to build up reserves gradually with the aim to reach 4 months of imports over the medium term. Executive Board Assessment2 Executive Directors welcomed Zambias strong economic performance over the past decade, which was underpinned by prudent macroeconomic management over much of this period. Nevertheless, they noted that the outlook is subject to significant risks from the recent widening of fiscal imbalances, reduced external buffers, and volatile copper prices. Directors therefore recommended containing the fiscal deficit, accelerating public financial management reforms, strengthening external buffers, and improving the business environment to help diversify the economy away from mining and accelerate poverty reduction. Directors called for comprehensive policy actions to address the unsustainable fiscal position following the spike in wage and subsidy spending last year. Noting the rapidly rising public debt and substantial downside risks to the budget, they recommended fiscal consolidation through increased revenue mobilization and a reorientation away from recurrent spending, to create fiscal space for infrastructure investment and control of the public debt. Directors welcomed the authorities plans to freeze wage spending in 2014 and limit the cost of agricultural subsidies. They advised that raising the tax-free threshold on personal income taxes runs counter to fiscal consolidation efforts and recommended accelerating revenue mobilization through changes in tax policy, enhanced mining tax administration, and broadening the tax base. Directors called for strengthening public financial management through improvements in budget planning, fiscal reporting, expenditure controls and debt management combined with stricter oversight and accountability. Strengthening debt management and project assessment capacity is critical, given the planned rise in infrastructure spending and recourse to nonconcessional borrowing. Noting the inherent risks, Directors advised against issuance of the proposed sub-national Eurobonds in favor of sovereign bonds, and stressed that all external borrowing should be subject to project appraisal and screened for consistency with macroeconomic stability, debt sustainability and the overall debt management strategy.

At the conclusion of the discussion, the Managing Director, as Chairman of the Board, summarizes the views of Executive Directors, and this summary is transmitted to the country's authorities. An explanation of any qualifiers used in summings up can be found here: http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/misc/qualifiers.htm.

Directors agreed that rising inflationary pressures warrant a tighter monetary stance. They welcomed progress in transitioning the monetary framework toward utilizing the policy rate and recommended improving liquidity forecasting and management. Directors advised rebuilding external buffers through enhanced exchange rate flexibility and further reserve accumulation. Directors welcomed recent improvements in Zambias ranking in the World Banks Doing Business Index, but called for improved policy consistency. They cautioned that the imposition of lending rate ceilings, restrictions on the use of foreign exchange, and rapid increases in minimum wages could undermine external competitiveness and erode investor confidence. Directors advised that financial intermediation could be better strengthened through enhanced competition and improved efficiency. Directors also recommended that the remaining exchange restrictions on current account transactions be removed expeditiously.

Zambia: Selected Economic Indicators, 201114


2011 Baseline Scenario 2012 Actual 2013 Proj. 2014

(Percentage Change) National account and prices GDP growth at constant prices Mining Non mining GDP deflator GDP at market prices (millions of kwacha) Consumer prices Consumer prices (average) Consumer prices (end of period) External sector Terms of trade (deterioration -) Average exchange rate (kwacha per U.S. dollar) (percentage change; depreciation -) Real effective exchange rate (depreciation -)
1

6.8 -5.2 8.2 12.5 93,344

7.2 -2.7 8.2 5.9 105,983

6.0 12.0 5.5 7.6 120,952

7.3 13.2 6.7 7.2 139,113

8.7 7.2

6.6 7.3

7.1 7.5

7.0 6.5

4.4 4.861 -1.3 -2.6

-12.5 5.147 -5.9 3.3

-3.9

1.4

Money and credit (end of period, unless otherwise specified) Domestic credit to the private sector Reserve money (end of period) Broad Money (M3) 28.2 6.8 21.7 37.0 51.4 17.9 10.0 -9.6 18.2 18.0 18.0 19.6

(Percent of GDP; unless otherwise indicated) National accounts Gross investment Government Private National savings Net lending(+)/net borrowing(-) Central government budget Revenue Taxes Grants Other revenue Expenditure Expense Net acquisition of nonfinancial assets Fiscal Measures Net lending/borrowing Excluding grants
2

23.5 4.2 19.3 27.1 3.7

24.8 6.5 18.3 24.9 0.1

24.8 6.6 18.1 23.4 -1.3

25.2 7.2 18.0 24.5 -0.6

21.7 19.3 0.8 1.6 23.9 19.7 4.2 -1.2 -2.0

22.7 18.2 1.7 2.9 26.0 19.6 6.5 -2.7 -4.4

20.9 17.2 1.0 2.7 29.5 22.9 6.6 0.0 -8.6 -9.6

22.0 16.9 1.4 3.7 29.4 22.2 7.2 1.1 -6.3 -7.8

Net acquisition of financial assets Domestic Foreign Net incurrance of liabilities Domestic Foreign External sector Current account balance (excluding grants) Gross International Reserves (months of prospective imports) Excluding FDI-financed imports Public debt Total central government debt, net (end-period) External Stock of domestic debt, net Memorandum item: Gross national income per capita (US$) Sources: Zambian authorities; and IMF staff estimates and projections.
1 2

2.4 2.4 0.0 3.6 2.4 1.2

2.0 2.0 0.0 4.7 1.1 3.7

-1.5 -1.5 0.0 6.4 4.8 1.7

0.7 0.7 0.0 7.0 2.0 5.0

3.7 2.9 2.8 3.3

0.1 -0.6 2.7 3.1

-1.3 -2.0 2.3 2.6

-0.6 -1.6 2.5 2.8

20.1 10.2 9.8 1,408

24.2 16.3 7.9 1,463

30.3 16.5 13.8

33.0 19.7 13.3

Excludes Zimbabwe. Including discrepancy between the above-the-line balance and below-the-line financing.

Statement by Mr. Saho, Executive Director for Zambia December 11, 2013 1. The Zambian authorities welcome the completion of the 2013 Article IV consultations and the Boards consideration. The authorities have had thorough and wideranging discussions with staff, particularly around the priorities of the new Government as it tackles the challenges of an unacceptably high level of poverty and inequality, whilst maintaining robust economic growth and macroeconomic stability. This concern has necessitated the adoption of a higher fiscal deficit profile over the medium term than was originally envisaged. 2. Whilst there are many areas in which the authorities agree with Fund staff, they do have areas of significant differences in terms of policy priorities and the emerging risks to strong growth and poverty reduction over the medium to long term. In particular, the authorities views differ from the assessment of Fund staff in several key areas: (1) outlook, risks and the fiscal stance; (2) public financial management (PFM); (3) monetary policy; and (4) competitiveness. A. Authorities views on selected key areas Outlook, risks, and the fiscal stance 3. The authorities projections for growth of an average of 7.5 percent over the medium term are consistent with those of the Fund staff. They are also looking to achieve fiscal consolidation over the medium term towards a deficit of no more than 3 percent of GDP. They do not, however, agree that such fiscal consolidation should be front-loaded. On the contrary, they believe that such front-loaded fiscal consolidation would substantially impair critical investment in the energy and transport sectors investment that is critical for strong growth and improved competitiveness. In addition, the Government is committed to substantially improving education and health outcomes in terms of both the availability and quality of health and education services. Both of these actions are critical to reduce poverty and inequality and to preserve peace and stability that Zambia has enjoyed since independence. 4. The authorities acknowledge and agree with Fund staff that improving Zambias fiscal position will require fundamental reforms that enable them to contain the wage bill and recurrent expenditures, and boost their revenue base. They would, however, welcome greater engagement and more innovative thinking around how the Government can better balance the need to manage its wage bill against its commitment to improve health and education outcomes through improved services and infrastructure. They note that the health and education sectors account for approximately 70 percent of the civil service workforce. Be that as it may, achieving the MDG targets, such as improving maternal

health and the education outcomes and opportunities for their children, will require more and better qualified teachers that will help to reduce pupil teacher ratios, as well as more health personnel to reduce the number of mothers giving birth without qualified attendants. The current health and education sectors are estimated to require additional 20,000 personnel each, if they are to achieve their MDG targets. While one way to address these challenges is improvements in labor productivity, such improvements will require greater use of technology (e-governance), which is expensive to implement and will need a medium- to long-term horizon to fully implement with implications for the budget deficit. 5. In the authorities view, failure to undertake these tasks poses a bigger threat to Zambias long term growth prospects and the probability of reducing poverty and inequality than failure to implement front-loaded fiscal consolidation. Therefore, the fiscal stance that has been adopted by the authorities reflects the new Governments strategy to address the constraints placed on economic growth by the low investments in infrastructure over the past years. However, the authorities remain committed to a tighter fiscal stance in the medium term, as the bottlenecks to growth are loosened. Public financial management (PFM) 6. The authorities broadly concur with the views of Fund staff on the need to revitalize reforms that will help to improve the quality and effectiveness of their expenditures. This will require them to significantly improve their institutional framework and arrangements in the areas of cash and financial management, planning and budgeting, as well as investment planning and debt management. The authorities are committed to these tasks and have already engaged their international cooperating partners for support. In 2014, for example, the Ministry of Finance will develop a planning and budgeting policy, and present a planning and budgeting bill to Parliament. Monetary policy 7. Zambias monetary policy has successfully reduced inflation, whilst maintaining a flexible exchange rate regime, as evidenced by the achievement and maintenance of single-digit inflation. In addition, recent work by Fund staff, suggests that the exchange rate is not misaligned. Therefore, the authorities are concerned that Fund staff continues to advocate for greater flexibility in the exchange rate, when the Bank of Zambia (BOZ) has allowed the exchange rate to fluctuate sometimes significantly, such as during the global financial crisis. The BOZ currently intervenes to contain excessive volatility, which undermines the primary monetary policy goal of achieving low inflation and more broadly economic growth. It should also be noted that regulations such as the Statutory Instrument (SI) 33 of 2012, which prohibits the pricing and quoting of domestic transactions in foreign currency, were intended to address the issue of dollarization and thereby strengthen the transmission mechanism of monetary policy.

Competitiveness 8. The authorities acknowledge the concerns raised by staff on the potential adverse impact of recent regulations on the competitiveness of the Zambian economy. However, they believe that many of these concerns are misplaced. One of the key impediments to improving competitiveness in Zambia has been poor infrastructure and shortage of skilled labor. Staff in fact acknowledges empirical work that suggests that Zambias infrastructure deficit relative to its regional neighbors, such as Mauritius, potentially cost the country 2 3 percent of GDP per annum. The Governments public investment strategy is squarely aimed at addressing these impediments. The authorities do not believe that the recent policy actions such as the increase in the minimum wage and strengthened monitoring of the external sector make the business environment worse. On the contrary, they believe that these actions will allow for productivity gains and improved macroeconomic management for the greater benefit of businesses and households. B. Recent economic developments, outlook and risks 9. Despite several challenges, Zambias economy continues to grow strongly, anchored on sound macroeconomic policies and a favorable business climate. Output grew by 7.2 percent in 2012, and averaged 6.3 percent between 2004 and 2012, according to the October 2013 Regional Economic Outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa. Growth in 2012 was driven mainly by agricultural, construction, and communication sectors. At the same time, inflation has remained broadly consistent with expectations and was 7 percent in November 2013. In response, the Bank of Zambias Monetary Policy Committee decided in November 2013 to maintain its policy rate at 9.75 percent. 10. As a result of prudent fiscal policy management, budget performance has improved consistently over time, with the deficit excluding grants declining from 8.4 percent of GDP in 2004 to about 4 percent in 2012. Despite pressures from the recent wage increase, the authorities remain committed to a sustainable fiscal policy stance. 11. Meanwhile, the external sector position was characteristic of solid economic performance, with staff analysis not showing a real exchange rate misalignment. The current account was broadly balanced in 2012; and foreign direct investment strong. According to the REO (October 2013), FDI flows increased sharply and reached 5 percent of GDP in 2012, in response to rising copper prices and Zambias relatively favorable business environment. 12. The financial sector is characterized by profitable and well-capitalized banks. Private sector credit remains strong and non-performing loans are declining. C. Request for waiver of non-observance of performance criterion 13. The Zambian authorities deeply regret the unintentional misreporting, and request a waiver for non-observance of a performance criterion (PC) under the ECF arrangement

that expired in June 2011. As explained in EBS/13/147, the misreporting relates to two loans that were contracted during Zambias ECF arrangement, each with a grant element less than 35 percent. 14. In line with the Managing Directors report, the authorities have explained the circumstances under which the Lusaka Stadium Project and the Mobile Hospital Project were not reported to the Fund at the time of the fifth and sixth reviews in December 2010 and June 2011, respectively. At the time, the two loans did not appear on the Ministry of Finances database, due to coordination gaps between different units of the debt management department. In addition, officers responsible for debt management had determined, prior to the contracting of these loans, that they would meet the 35 percent grant element threshold. However, based on revised calculations, they fell slightly short of the threshold. 15. The authorities are taking necessary action to strengthen debt management. To deal with the gaps in coordination, the Ministry of Finance have developed a Public Debt Procedures Manual, aimed at providing guidance and direction to all stakeholders involved in debt management. Also, the authorities have instructed government creditors to inform the relevant unit whenever a disbursement takes place. At the same time, relevant units now undertake regular bi-monthly internal reconciliation. Furthermore, the authorities are working on a broader Debt Management Reform Plan that was finalized earlier this year, in collaboration with the World Bank. The plan addresses key debt management issues, including strengthening of the legal framework, developing a debt management strategy, and improving operational risk management. The authorities have also committed to sharing with the Fund team the terms of all future external loan agreements prior to their signing, for a proper assessment of their concessionality. D. Conclusion 16. My Zambian authorities have resolved to step up infrastructure development, to build on the economys strong track record of macroeconomic performance. Despite resource and capacity constraints, they will continue to work closely with the Fund and other international development partners in an effort to improve the welfare of the Zambians.

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