Jump to navigation

Tunisia

Saïed demands central bank loans to plug deficit

Risking hyper-inflation and a run on the dinar, the President is pushing for a bigger state overdraft

President Kaïs Saïed is piling on the pressure for Tunisia's central bank to become the latest African bank to provide billions of dollars in direct budget finance, a move which economists warn is likely to lead to inflation and a currency collapse.

Last month, the government approved a controversial bill allowing the central bank to finance the treasury, despite the objections of bank governor Marouane Abassi, who has warned that the measure, used in Ghana and Nigeria in recent years, could push inflation into triple digits.

Abassi, who is set to leave his post in March when his first six year term expires, has warned that 'a Venezuelan scenario will be repeated in Tunisia.'

Talks with the IMF on a proposed US$1.9 billion bail-out have made little progress and the government has been shut out of lending on the international markets. Saïed's returning €60 million ($64.5m) of a €785m 'cash for migrant control' deal with the European Union to Brussels has cast doubt over the remainder of the funding (Dispatches 17/10/23, Saïed chooses isolation after returning EU cash).

After keeping Tunisia's credit rating at CCC- in December, ratings agency Fitch warned that changing the law to allow the Central Bank to directly finance the government 'would endanger the credibility of the Central Bank and increase pressure on prices and the exchange rate'

The government wants the central bank to directly buy up to 7bn Tunisian dinars ($2.25 bn) of interest-free bonds to help close a budget deficit of 10bn dinars.



Related Articles

DISPATCHES

Saïed chooses isolation after returning EU cash

The President has turned down €60m of funding from Europe and is no closer to agreement on a $1.9bn IMF programme

It is increasingly hard to see where Tunisia will source financial support in the coming months after President Kaïs Saïed rejected funding from the European Union. Last week...

READ FOR FREE

Nobbling Nabil

The establishment has taken fright at popular new politicians, and is trying to kill off genuine challenges to the president and ruling party

A political class absorbed by the painfully long run-up to parliamentary elections on 6 October and the presidential poll on 17 November has suddenly found itself with a...


Upstarts and old guards

Jealous of presidential candidate Nabil Karoui's popularity, the political class manoeuvred to have him arrested

Tunisians go to the polls on 15 September to choose a new president and, three weeks later, a new parliament. The contests lacked strong drama until 23 August,...


Unions and oppositionists warn of a social explosion

Widespread food and fuel shortages are driving anger on the streets as President Saïed focuses on his authoritarian political project

As police clashed with protestors in Tunis over the weekend of 15-16 October, the IMF announced that it had reached provisional agreement with President Kaïs Saïed's government for...


Post-poll rumblings

The arrest of dozens of school and college students during demonstrations in the south-east - traditionally a barometer of popular tension - broke the veneer of total calm...