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To: bill718 who wrote (3194)5/1/1998 1:45:00 AM
From: bill718  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4718
 
IMF set to restart bail-out payments for Indonesia
05:55 p.m Apr 30, 1998 Eastern

By Adam Entous

WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) - The
International Monetary Fund is set to approve a $1
billion loan payment to Indonesia next Monday, and
to disburse a further $2 billion in June and July, a
senior IMF official said on Thursday.

IMF First Deputy Managing Director Stanley Fischer
commended the government for making progress on
economic reforms, and said he expected the IMF
board on Monday to restart loan payments to
Indonesia from a $40 billion international rescue
package.

''I expect that on Monday, when the board of the
IMF meets to consider the next disbursement to
Indonesia, that it will -- on the current trajectory,
assuming no difficulties arise in the interim -- consider
favorably the Indonesian request,'' Fischer told a
business conference in Washington.

Under the terms of Indonesia's initial arrangement
with the IMF, the fund would have paid $3 billion in
March. But that payment was delayed because the
IMF was worried about how Indonesia was
implementing the reforms.

Under the new monthly monitoring process, Fischer
said next week's payout to Jakarta would be for only
$1 billion.

''Instead of disbursing $3 billion on Monday, we will
disburse $1 billion on Monday, $1 billion a month later
and $1 billion a month after that, with monthly
checkups on the execution of the program,'' Fischer
said.

Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous country,
turned to the IMF for help after the rupiah currency
crashed last October. Its initial currency-related
problems quickly exposed a fragile banking system
and a mountain of bad debt.

Fischer said the IMF's latest agreement with Jakarta
was sound, and he downplayed doubts about
Indonesia's commitment to reform. Two previous
loan agreements failed because the government
dithered on reforms.

Hoping to convince skeptics that this agreement was
different, the government has set target dates for
implementing the 117-point reform program.

''This is a very good agreement,'' Fischer said.

Fischer said the IMF planned to check each month to
see if the authorities were meeting the terms of the
latest package, and sources said the IMF would only
pay if it was sure the government was doing enough.

The IMF usually monitors the reform programs of its
debtors on a quarterly or a semiannual basis, but
monthly monitoring has been used in several countries
where IMF experts think there is a higher than average
risk that policy will slip.

Fischer said most sticking points with the government
on elements of the economic program had been
worked out.

''We believe that those problems have been taken
care (of),'' he said. ''We see no sense for
confrontation, rather a sense of trying to work things
out.'' REUTERS



To: bill718 who wrote (3194)5/4/1998 1:26:00 PM
From: Junaidi  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 4718
 
Fuel prices increased 70% in Indonesia from midnight tonight! Junaidi