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Archive -Seychelles

$5m World Bank loan to boost 'inclusive growth' in Seychelles |03 November 2015

The World Bank has approved a loan of $5 million to the Seychelles to aid shared prosperity and growth in the small island developing state.

According to a press statement issued by the Bretton Woods institution last week, the World Bank’s board of executive directors approved the loan, which will be made available through the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) arm of the organisation.

Seychelles will use the funding to improve public expenditure and investment, health and education programmes as well as improve local access to credit.

The World Bank’s country director for Seychelles, Mark Lundell, said the institution aims to support Seychelles’ efforts towards boosting shared prosperity by means of inclusive economic growth.

“So far, Seychelles has achieved impressive results on improving the quality of public services such as education and primary health care and these gains need to be sustained,” he said in the statement.

Seychelles embarked on a five-year IMF-assisted economic reform programme in 2008 after mounting external debts and the global economic crisis led the government into default.

In March 2014, the former IMF mission chief for Seychelles, Marshall Mills, announced support from the executive board for a new generation of reforms under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) for the Seychelles, in line with the government's target to reduce public debt-to-GDP ratios to below 50 percent by 2018.

According to the World Bank, the US $5 million loan will be funnelled through the Ministry of Finance, Trade and the Blue Economy to “improve the efficiency of public expenditure and the country’s business environment through greater access to credit and improved public investment”.

Upgraded in mid-2015 by the Bank from an upper-middle income to a high income economy, the small island developing state now has a Gross National Income (GNI) of US $13,990 per capita, according to the World Bank.

The mainstay of Seychelles’ income are tourism and fisheries, but both sectors remain vulnerable to external shocks on the global market.

According to the World Bank’s country profile on Seychelles, the island nation earned US $1.4 billion dollars last year, with the majority of its income coming from tourism, fisheries and the offshore financial industry.

Seychelles is currently sub-Saharan Africa’s top earner in terms of GNI per capita.

However, the Bank cautioned that the country’s main challenge lay in ensuring what it has termed as the 'bottom 40 percent' of the population also benefit from the increased income status through more employment opportunities and improved public services.

“Seychelles has had a good performance in reducing poverty,” said the World Bank’s task team leader of the project, Rafael Muñoz Moreno. “Social indicators are impressive and the country has achieved most of the millennium development goals, especially for education, health, poverty eradication, and the environment.”

 

 

 

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