IMF Country Report No. 24/92
IMF Country Report No. 24/92
IMF Country Report No. 24/92
24/92
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
REQUEST FOR AN ARRANGEMENT UNDER THE
April 2024
RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY FACILITY—PRESS
RELEASE; STAFF REPORT; AND STATEMENT BY THE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR FOR CÔTE D’IVOIRE
In the context of the Request for an Arrangement Under the Resilience and Sustainability
Facility, the following documents have been released and are included in this package:
• The Staff Report prepared by a staff team of the IMF for the Executive Board’s
consideration on March 15, 2024, following discussions that ended on February 16,
2024, with the officials of Côte d’Ivoire on economic developments and policies
underpinning the IMF arrangement under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility.
Based on information available at the time of these discussions, the staff report was
completed on March 1, 2024.
• A Debt Sustainability Analysis prepared by the staffs of the IMF and the
International Development Association.
• A World Bank Assessment Letter for the Resilience and Sustainability Facility.
The IMF’s transparency policy allows for the deletion of market-sensitive information and
premature disclosure of the authorities’ policy intentions in published staff reports and
other documents.
• The IMF Executive Board approved a 30-month RSF arrangement for Côte d’Ivoire for a
total amount of SDR975.6 million (approximately US$1.3 billion).
• Côte d’Ivoire is exposed and vulnerable to climate change. Rising temperatures, rainfall
disruptions, flooding, rising sea levels and coastal erosion are major challenges and
represent recurring risks for resilient, sustainable, and inclusive economic growth.
• The RSF arrangement will support the reforms of the Ivorian authorities to strengthen
adaptation and mitigation, particularly in the areas of agriculture, transport, infrastructure,
and public financial management.
Washington, DC – March 15, 2024: The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) approved a Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) Arrangement for Côte d’Ivoire.
Reviews under the 30-month RSF arrangement with a total access of SDR975.6 million (about
US$1.3 billion or 150 percent of Côte d’Ivoire’s IMF quota) will coincide with reviews of the
Extended Credit Facility (ECF) and Extended Fund Facility (EFF) arrangements approved in
May 2023 (for an amount of about SDR2,601.6 million, or 400 percent of quota). The
ECF/EFF arrangements support the government's economic program over 2023-2026 for
macroeconomic stability and the structural economic transformation to transition Côte d’Ivoire
towards an upper middle-income country.
Côte d’Ivoire is highly exposed to climate change through rising temperatures and sea levels
as well as rain pattern changes. Economic vulnerabilities to climate change are mostly due to
the country’s heavy reliance on agriculture, and the concentration of industrial and services
activity in coastal areas. Agriculture employs about half of the workforce and contributes about
17 percent of GDP and 10 percent of tax revenues. At the same time, greenhouse gas
emission and pollution in urban areas are growing, albeit from a low level.
The authorities have made strong commitments to reducing the adverse effects of climate
change and have developed several government initiatives with development partners’
involvement. The RSF arrangement will support the authorities’ ambitious homegrown
package of reform measures which comprises a balanced mix of adaptation and mitigation
efforts and centered around six key pillars: integrating climate into key aspects of PFM,
strengthening governance of climate policies, reinforcing safeguards for the agricultural sector,
creating a framework for green and sustainable financing, building resilience to climate
hazards, and controlling and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The strategy is based on
strong diagnostics including the World Bank Country Climate and Development Report,
Climate-Public Investment Management Assessment and green public financial management
technical assistance and complemented by various national plans and strategies. Strong
synergies with the EFF/ECF arrangements, notably in domestic revenue mobilization, public
finance management and financial market deepening, should further enhance the impact of
expected outcomes. Technical assistance from the IMF and development partners, including
the World Bank Group, the African Development Bank, the UNDP, and bilateral partners
should continue to play an important role in meeting challenges from climate change.
Following the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Kenji Okamura, Deputy Managing Director
and Acting Chair, made the following statement:
“Côte d’Ivoire is highly exposed to climate change mainly through rising temperatures and sea
levels, and rain pattern changes. Economic vulnerabilities to climate change are exacerbated
due to the country’s heavy reliance on agriculture and the concentration of industrial and
services activity in coastal areas, while greenhouse gas emissions are rising, albeit from low
levels.
“Addressing the impact of climate change is a key priority for the country as reflected in its
National Development Plan and multiple national strategies and plans, including the country’s
leadership in organizing the UNCCD COP15 in 2022 to combat desertification. The country
has identified priority mitigation and adaptation policies to increase climate resilience in its
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC).
“Built on strong diagnostics, the reforms under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF)
arrangement are centered around six pillars to address the key challenges related to climate
change. They include integrating climate into key aspects of PFM, strengthening governance
of climate policies, reinforcing safeguards for the agricultural sector, creating a framework for
green sustainable financing, building resilience to climate hazards, and controlling and
reducing greenhouse gas emissions. On the latter one, the authorities committed to develop a
carbon taxation strategy which, along with other commitments, should also create synergies
with key policies under the EFF/ECF arrangements such as enhancing domestic revenue
mobilization.
“The implementation of reforms under the RSF arrangement should improve Côte d’Ivoire’s
resilience to climate change over the medium term, replace more expensive financing, build
buffers against climate shocks and related prospective balance of payment needs. The strong
collaboration with development partners should ensure complementarity of all actors’
programs to support the country’s reform agenda. It should also encourage the catalytical
effect of the RSF to finance the large financing needs identified in the authorities’ NDC.”
Côte d’Ivoire: Select Economic Indicators 2020-24
Output
Real GDP Growth (%) 0.9 7.4 6.7 6.4 6.5
Prices
Inflation (annual average, %) 2.4 4.2 5.2 4.4 3.8
Balance of payments
Current account (% GDP) -3.1 -4.0 -7.7 -5.8 -3.8
Net FDI Inflows (% GDP) 1.1 1.5 1.8 1.7 1.8
WAEMU reserves (in months of imports) 5.5 5.1 4.2 … …
External public debt (% GDP) 29.7 30.9 34.5 35.1 34.3
Exchange rate
REER (% change, depreciation –) 5.1 -0.6 -5.2 … …
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Context. Côte d’Ivoire is highly exposed to climate change through rising temperatures
and sea levels as well as rain pattern changes. Economic vulnerabilities to climate
change are mostly due to the country’s heavy reliance on agriculture, and the
concentration of industrial and services activity in coastal areas. Agriculture employs
about half of the workforce and contributes about 17 percent of GDP and 10 percent of
tax revenues. At the same time, greenhouse gas emission and pollution in urban areas
are growing, albeit from a low level.
RSF. The authorities have made strong commitments to reduce the adverse effects
of climate change and have developed several government initiatives with
development partners’ involvement. The proposed access of 150 percent of quota
(or SDR 975.6 million) is commensurate with the authorities’ ambitious reforms and
proven track-record. The authorities’ homegrown package of reform measures is
balanced between mitigation and adaptation efforts and centered around six key
pillars: integrating climate into key aspects of PFM, strengthening governance of
climate policies, reinforcing safeguards for the agricultural sector, creating a framework
for green and sustainable financing, building resilience to climate hazards, and
controlling and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The strategy is based on
diagnostics including the World Bank CCDR, C-PIMA and green PFM TA and
complemented by various national plans and strategies. Strong synergies with the
EFF/ECF arrangements, notably in domestic revenue mobilization, public financial
management, and financial market deepening, should further enhance the impact of
expected outcomes. The 30-month RSF request is presented for Board approval ahead
of the second EFF/ECF review to maintain strong reform momentum and ownership.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
CONTENTS
Glossary ____________________________________________________________________________________________4
CONTEXT FOR RSF REQUEST, ECONOMIC SETTING, AND PROGRAM PERFORMANCE ______ 5
A. Context for the RSF Request_____________________________________________________________________5
B. Economic Setting ________________________________________________________________________________7
C. Program Performance ___________________________________________________________________________8
BOX
1. Carbon Taxation and the Role of the Fuel Price Mechanism ___________________________________ 15
TABLES
1. Timeline of Proposed Reform Measures _______________________________________________________ 17
2. Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2021-28 _________________________________________ 21
3a. Balance of Payments, 2021-28 (CFA Billions) _________________________________________________ 22
3b. Balance of Payments, 2021-28 (Percent of GDP)_____________________________________________ 23
3C. Balance of Payments, 2024-26 (CFA Billions) _________________________________________________ 24
4a. Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 2021-28 (CFA billions) ________________________ 25
4b. Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 2021-28 (Percent of GDP) ____________________ 26
4c. Financing Requirements and Sources, 2024-26 (CFA Billions) ________________________________ 27
ANNEX
I. Challenges from Climate Change and Policy Priorities _________________________________________ 38
APPENDIX
I. Letter of Intent _________________________________________________________________________________ 53
Attachment I. Supplement to the 2024–26 Memorandum of Economic and Financial
Policies for the Resilience and Sustainability Facility ________________________________________ 55
Glossary
AfDB African Development Bank
BCEAO Central Bank of West African States
C2D Debt Reduction and Development contract
CNDP National Public Debt Committee
CNPS Private Sector Pension Fund
CCDR Country Climate and Development Report
C-PIMA Climate-Public Investment Management Assessment
DGD General Directorate of Customs
DGTCP General Directorate of the Treasury and Public Accounting
DSA Debt Sustainability Analysis
ECF Extended Credit Facility
EFF Extended Fund Facility
E-GDDS Enhanced General Data Dissemination System
EPN National Public Establishments
ESG Environmental, Social and Governance
FDI Foreign Direct Investment
GFSM Government Finance Statistics Manual
IHPI Harmonized Industrial Production Index
MEFP Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies
MTBF Medium-Term Budget Framework
MTDS Medium-term Debt Strategy
MTEF Medium-Term Expenditure Framework
MTRS Medium-term Revenue Mobilization Strategy
NDF Net Domestic Financing
NDP National Development Plan
PFM Public Financial Management
PIMA Public Investment Management Assessment
PRGF Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility
RSF Resilience and Sustainability Facility
SME Small- or Medium-sized Enterprise
TMU Technical Memorandum of Understanding
TOFE Tableau des Opérations Financières de l’État
TSA Treasury Single Account
UNDP United Nations Development Program
UNCCD COP15 United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification Conference of
Parties 15
WAEMU West African Economic and Monetary Union
WEO World Economic Outlook
1. After years of strong growth, the Text Figure 1. Climate Change Risk Index
triple shock of the COVID pandemic, the war 10
2. Côte d’Ivoire is highly exposed to climate change through rising temperatures and sea
levels, as well as rain pattern changes (Annex I). With temperatures already on the rise and
weather patterns becoming more extreme, studies project that, by 2050, Côte d’Ivoire could face the
combined effects of hotter average temperatures (between 1 and 4°C higher depending on the
scenario), greater variability in rainfall (-9 percent in May and +9 percent in October), and higher sea
levels (up to 30 cm), as well as associated risks of flooding and coastal erosion.
• Côte d’Ivoire is the world’s largest producer and exporter of cocoa, accounting for 40 percent of
global cocoa exports. Cocoa alone represents around 30 percent of the country’s export revenue
and provides income to about one-fifth of its population.
• Despite its importance for the Ivorian economy, only 0.2 percent of the country’s cropland is
under irrigation, making it vulnerable to adverse weather and climate change. Agricultural
productivity is already severely impacted by climate change and may have decreased by more
than 35 percent compared to a counter-factual without climate change.1 The World Bank
estimates that the land suitable for cocoa production could shrink by about half by 2050.
• The 556-kilometer coastline is another major source of exposure and vulnerability, being home
to about 30 percent of the population and 80 percent of economic activity, including fishing
activities. Sea level rise will likely exacerbate flooding, shoreline retreat and loss of beaches.
4. The estimated costs of climate change are significant, as are the financing needs to
implement adaptation and mitigation measures. Currently, Côte d’Ivoire experiences around
US$80 million in annual losses from floods (or about 0.11 percent of GDP), which are heavily
concentrated in the north-east part of the
Climate
TextFinance
FigureNeeds 2. Climate Finance Needs
country. The authorities revised their
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) 24
USD billion (total) Percent of 2023 GDP (total, RHS)
75
in 2022 and made strong commitments to
increase climate resilience and reduce 18
in 2022. Private financing, as well as Sources: World Bank and IMF staff calculations.
1
Ortiz-Bobea et al (2021). “Anthropogenic climate change has slowed global agricultural productivity growth.”
Nature Accessed on 11/20/2023: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-021-01000-1, cited in IPCC AR6 WGII
Chapter 9.
measures (RMs) are based on strong diagnostics from, among others, the CCDR and technical
assistance on C-PIMA and green PFM, all completed in Q4-2023.
B. Economic Setting
6. The Ivorian economy remains resilient despite the adverse external environment.
Economic activity was robust in the first half of 2023, led by stronger-than-expected domestic
demand, despite weather shocks affecting cocoa and coffee crops and disease outbursts affecting
cotton production. Weak external demand and tighter financial conditions are estimated to have
weighed on industrial and service activity in the second half of the year. Against this backdrop, staff
estimate real GDP growth at about 6.4 percent for 2023, down from 6.7 percent in 2022. Overall
consumer price inflation (y/y) resumed its downward trend to average 4.4 percent in 2023, down
from 5.2 percent at end 2022, reflecting lower import prices.
8. The current account deficit is also narrowing. Following a sustained surge in the price of
cocoa, in part driven by lower production in the country due to adverse weather, the current
account deficit is projected to narrow by about 4 percent of GDP over the course of two years
(it reached 3.8 percent in 2024, down from an estimated 5.8 percent of GDP in 2023). Nevertheless,
capital inflows in 2023 were insufficient to finance the still elevated current account deficit. Official
reserves fell over the course of 2023 but edged up towards year-end, with Côte d’Ivoire’s reserve
path broadly mirroring that of the WAEMU region.
9. Côte d’Ivoire remains at moderate risk of debt distress. The inclusion of the RSF in the
baseline is conservatively assumed to substitute only domestic borrowing, keeping external
financing needs unchanged. Notwithstanding the implied further shift towards external debt, the
preliminary outcome of the DSA remains the same as it was for the first EFF/ECF review DSA with
debt assessed at moderate risk of distress. Judgement is applied to reflect a strong track record of
market access, sustained active debt management, and improvement of institutional and legislative
frameworks. The recent successful eurobond issuance in the amount of US$2.6 billion was added in
the DSA baseline and marks an important milestone after two years of adverse external financing
conditions. While details remain to be determined, the bond placement was mainly for liability-
management purposes and should improve the outlook for both external and debt sustainability.
10. The outlook is favorable due to strong domestic fundamentals and a gradually
improving external environment. Still strong private consumption and investment are expected to
support robust output growth of 6.5 percent in 2024. Inflation is expected to fall within the BCEAO’s
1–3 percent target range by end-2024, with an annual average of 3.8 percent. The overall fiscal
deficit is projected to decline to 4 percent of GDP in 2024 amid further improvement in domestic
revenue mobilization consistent with the 2024 budget. Output growth is expected to remain robust
at around 6.4 percent over 2025-26, underpinned by capital deepening and the gradual
improvement in external conditions, before converging to its estimated long-term potential of
around 6 percent. Inflation is expected to average about 3 percent in 2025-26 and remain within the
BCEAO target range while the current account deficit would narrow further to about 3 percent of
GDP by 2025. The fiscal deficit is projected to reach the WAEMU deficit target of 3 percent of GDP
by 2025.
11. The balance of risks has improved, but remains tilted to the downside. Regional security
challenges could generate spending pressures and weigh on confidence, while a renewed spike in
international oil prices could put pressure on tax revenue from petroleum products. However, these
would be mitigated by the authorities’ commitment to reduce non-priority spending in order to
meet unforeseen additional security spending needs, and to undertake further pump price increases,
as needed, to avoid revenue losses. Notwithstanding the recent successful bond issuance, a renewed
deterioration in external financing conditions could increase debt service costs over time, making it
challenging to meet significant financing needs (Table 9). A weaker-than-anticipated recovery in
pooled regional FX reserves, could also weigh on investor confidence, as could regional
fragmentation. On the upside, global inflation pressures could subside faster than anticipated,
leading to more favorable financing conditions. Moreover, potentially higher oil and gas extraction
could boost longer-term growth prospects.
C. Program Performance
13. Côte d’Ivoire is still at an early stage in the development of a robust framework for
integration of climate
considerations in public Text Figure 3. Côte d’Ivoire – C-PIMA Results
financial management. To
strengthen their approach, the
authorities committed to fully
integrate climate change
considerations into PFM/PIM
frameworks. They will ensure
that budget processes and
institutions are responsive to
environmental and climate
concerns, including key PIM
steps such as evaluation and
selection of projects. This is a
first step to implement a resilient
low-carbon development model
and fulfill the prerequisites to
access climate financing.
Sources: 2023 C-PIMA/Green PFM TA report, IMF staff calculations.
Specifically, the authorities
committed to the following three complementary RMs, which will be supported by IMF TA:
• (i) Adopt an arrêté ministériel establishing a system for tagging climate-related investment expenditure
at the stage of public investment programming its execution during the fiscal year, with a coverage
initially limited to five ministries, the ones in charge of energy, agriculture, environment and
sustainable development, water management (“hydraulique”), and sanitation (“assainissement”).
(ii) Prepare and publish on this basis a first climate budget statement attached to the 2026 budget law,
presenting climate-related investment expenditure expected for these entities. (RM1). The system
would enable the identification of climate-related investment to foster a low carbon development
model and facilitate access to green financing. Before the rollout to the whole government, the five
pilot ministries will be integrated into the 2025 budget. The authorities also committed to expand
the system to brown expenditure in a second phase.
• Establish a framework for modeling, and integrate quantitative analysis of climate-related fiscal risks
into the Fiscal Risk Statement by end-October 2025 (RM2). This is an important step to build capacity
to integrate climate-related hazards into budgetary forecast and raise awareness through a
budgetary risk statement.
14. There is a wide consensus that Côte d’Ivoire suffers from institutional arrangements that
generate a fragmentation of climate policy and a lack of coordination. The World Bank CCDR
emphasizes that institutional responsibility for addressing climate change is spread across public sector
institutions, and that climate change exerts stress on institutional capacities for policy planning,
coordination, and policy implementation and monitoring. The C-PIMA and Green PFM TA reports find
that coordination mechanisms across the state and with other entities to integrate climate change into
decision-making remain limited. Against this backdrop, the government plans to adopt a law on climate
change, which entails the creation of several entities, including the National Commission to Combat
Climate Change, the National Climate Authority, a dedicated fund or another mechanism for mobilizing
green finance, and the establishment of a scientific watchdog body to guide policy decisions for this
purpose. To strengthen transparency, accountability, and coordination on climate policy, the authorities
are committed to the following RM:
• Task a commission, placed under the auspices of the Prime Minister’s office, with producing an annual
report, which will be published, on the government’s progress on Côte d’Ivoire’s climate transition which
includes short-term and medium-term recommendations to the government on how to improve
climate action. An official communication on this report will be presented in the Council of Ministers by
end-October 2024 (RM4, see MEFP Table 1 for further details). The commission mentioned in this RM
is expected to be the national commission under the future law on climate change.
15. Agriculture is an important sector for the economy but is exposed and vulnerable to
climate hazards. Given its importance and vulnerability, many partners are supporting the authorities in
building resilience in the sector (see Annex I for details). Protecting farmers’ livelihoods against growing
climate-related income risks plays an important role in this regard. With increased financial resilience,
farmers would be able to invest into more resistant crops, set up irrigation systems, and diversify their
agricultural portfolio. The proposed RM exploits synergies with the West African Development Bank’s
partial and temporary support for the risk premia of a farmers’ insurance scheme. The government will
set up the insurance scheme and the private sector is expected to cover the insurance fully after four
years, when the West African Development Bank’s subsidy for the premia is completely phased out. The
RM sets out to operationalize the scheme, including administration, monitoring, capacity building and
building credit lines for risk reduction investments. Because of its macro-criticality, vulnerability and
capacity, the cotton sector was chosen for the pilot scheme Specifically, the authorities are committed to:
• Gradually implement an insurance system against climate hazards. As a first step, a pilot insurance
system for the cotton sector will be set up through capacity building for stakeholders (producers and
cooperatives) and preparations for the introduction of insurance products for the sector’s stakeholders
by the end of December 2025 (RM5).
Key Challenge 4: Lack of Green and Sustainable Financing for Private and Public Companies
16. Mobilizing new private sector climate financing requires developing a climate financial
information architecture. The government took steps toward establishing a sustainable financing
framework by introducing a green finance platform and a draft ESG framework. The platform was
introduced in 2020 through an inter-ministerial arrêté to coordinate the mobilization of public and
private climate financing and ensure the traceability of these financing flows; it is not operational,
however. While the ESG framework was updated in 2023 and served as a basis for the issuance of a
9-year, US$1.1 billion sustainability bond in December 2023, it does not substitute for a climate financial
information architecture. The latter is needed to steer credit allocation to private and public companies
toward long-term investments that are aligned with the country’s adaptation and mitigation objectives
and to scale up domestic and international private climate financing. To address this gap, two
complementary measures will be taken, together with a third measure aimed at operationalizing the
green finance platform:
• To develop the climate financial information architecture, adopt a decree on the introduction of two
complementary frameworks along with the implementation timeline: (i) a transition taxonomy
(reference framework for public and private sector climate investments) covering the country’s
mitigation and adaptation needs across key sectors; and (ii) an inter-ministerial coordination
mechanism on the design of the taxonomy by end-April 2025 (RM6).
• To guide climate investments by the private sector, based on the taxonomy implemented under RM6,
adopt a decree that comprises: (i) the introduction of a climate risk disclosure framework for state-
owned enterprises and non-financial private companies, connected to the taxonomy; and (ii) a
disclosure requirement that is integrated within the financial reporting of state-owned enterprises and
non-financial companies, based on the climate risk disclosure framework, together with their
implementation timeline by end-April 2025 (RM7).
• Adopt a decree that comprises two actions: (i) operationalize the green finance platform by (1) setting
up a website where domestic and international climate finance actors can find key information on the
principal pillars of the National Strategy on Mobilizing Private Climate Financing, the NDCs, the
National Adaptation Plan, the National Development Plan, the quantified targets for the mobilization
of domestic and international climate financing envisaged for different financial instruments, and the
involvement of MDBs and other international development partners in the National Strategy on
Mobilizing Private Climate Financing, and (2) designing and implementing a training and capacity
development plan for national actors on climate financing instruments, climate-related taxonomies,
and climate risk disclosure frameworks; and (ii) design and implement a finance Measurement,
Reporting and Verification (MRV) system for said finance platform by end-October 2024 (RM8).
17. Côte d’Ivoire has experienced many extreme weather events, which are likely to increase
in frequency and severity as climate change progresses. Extreme floods or droughts are already
impacting the economy by destroying public and private capital, agricultural production and causing
deaths and displacement. The following reform measures will help address such hazards:
• Strengthen the environment and climate change component and deploy the multi-hazard early
warning system in the Adzopé department. This early warning system will enable rapid responses to
and mitigation of the impact of disasters, both in the short and long term. Prior to nationwide
implementation, the early warning system will be tested in a pilot phase in the Adzopé department. A
report summarizing the first alerts will be produced in December 2024. (RM9). An early warning
system enables the authorities and population to respond rapidly, which dampens the impact of
disasters, both in the short and long term. Before a country-wide implementation, the authorities
would pilot an early warning system in the exposed region of Adzopé. This RM exploits synergies
with the World Bank and World Meteorological Organization projects on early warning systems.
These partners focus on the effects of floods, while the RM covers other hazards and risks, including
those directly related to climate change or that will be worsened by it, such as health and security
concerns.
• Design and adopt standardized maintenance methodologies integrating the impact of climate change
for road infrastructure and pilot their implementation in the greater Abidjan (RM10). With climate
consideration integrated in the maintenance and accounting of fixed assets, the resilience of critical
roads will increase, ultimately decreasing the long-term costs associated with degradation, and
enabling quicker recovery from disasters (see Annex I). The authorities are committed to develop a
road design manual for end-March 2024 and a follow-up report for end-October 2024.
18. Côte d’Ivoire’s emissions are increasing in key sectors, albeit from low levels. The country
made an ambitious commitment to reduce emissions by over 30 percent (compared to status quo) by
2030 during the COP28. While agriculture and land-use change and forestry are the largest contributors
to gas emissions, their emissions remained stagnant over the past decades compared to growing
emissions from the energy and transport sectors (currently the second and third largest contributors to
GHG emissions, respectively). It is important to ensure that rapid development will not be followed by a
surge of emissions, which would make mitigation more costly in the future. To curb greenhouse gas
emissions, the authorities are working on a comprehensive national strategy of carbon pricing, involving
both the design of carbon credits and a strategy for carbon taxation. The RSF support will focus on the
latter with targeted reform measures in the energy and transport sector. Given the importance of natural
gas as transition fuel in Côte d’Ivoire's electrification strategy and relatively low CO2 emissions in
electricity production, measures under the RSF will focus on improving efficiency of consumption and
boosting the share of renewables in production. In the transport sector, a shift towards an explicit carbon
taxation will be complemented by regulatory improvements for e-mobility and reforms to the
environmental vehicle tax system to provide consistent incentives for transition to lower-emission
vehicles. Moreover, integrating a range of environmental taxes and funds into the budget will be an
important step to increase governance and reinforce climate policy reforms.
19. The authorities aim to sensitize the public and private sector to energy efficiency. The
authorities committed to implement a mandatory energy audit system of entities with annual energy
consumption equal to or greater than a benchmark2 for the industrial, tertiary and transportation sectors in
2025, and complete the first five audits by September 2025, and to implement a mandatory energy labeling
system for new air conditioners, refrigerators, and electric lamps by December 2024 (RM11). The
authorities also committed to provide the list of entities subject to the audit by March 2025 as well as a
list of certified energy auditors who are not identified nor trained yet. These measures provide an
enabling environment for decarbonization by disseminating information about ways to economize on
energy consumption. This RM has synergies with RMs13-16, which should increase its potential impact.
20. The authorities are committed to develop and implement a national strategy on carbon
taxation with IMF technical assistance. The authorities remain committed to adhering to market-
driven fuel pricing, with automatic price changes within the limits of the existing mechanism
(i.e., 40CFAF/L), as needed to reduce the volatility of end-user prices and preserve tax revenue on fuel
products (including from a carbon tax). The authorities are thus committed to continue to apply the
existing fuel pricing mechanism with automatic adjustments to smooth price volatility and preserve tax
revenues. In addition, the Government undertakes to develop a carbon taxation strategy tailored to
Côte d'Ivoire's needs and in line with IMF technical assistance, and to make any necessary adjustments to
fuel prices in line with this strategy by the end of December 2025 at the latest (RM12, see MEFP Table 1 for
further details). The IMF TA could also include a communication strategy where the carbon tax is staged
in clear milestones and its rationale is clearly explained to the population. To attenuate the impact on the
most vulnerable population, the authorities continue to expand well targeted assistance via the World
Bank-supported cash transfers program, coupled with the social spending under the EFF/ECF
arrangements.
2
All entities with an annual energy consumption equal or superior to the threshold for the industry, tertiary, and
transport sectors. Thresholds are defined as follows: Industry: 1,500 tonnes of oil equivalent (toe) or 2,000 MWh;
Services and Transport: 500 toe or 1,000 MWh.
21. To strengthen mitigation efforts in the transport sector, the authorities are promoting
e-mobility with the target of a 10 percent share of electric vehicles in the registered vehicle fleet by
2030 as set out in the NDC. To that effect, they intend to adopt a decree to promote e-mobility in
Côte d’Ivoire by addressing issues such as the installation of electric charging stations, technical inspections
of electric vehicles, insurance for electric vehicles, and compliance with standards for battery charging
stations by April 2024 (RM13).
22. Within the context of the national strategy on carbon taxation, the authorities also intend
to ensure consistency between different parts of the environmental tax system for vehicles,
notably between the application of registration fees, import duties, taxes, and other regulations relevant
in terms of their impact on the promotion of cleaner, more efficient cars. In this regard, they are
committed to examine and adopt any necessary reforms on the existing environmental tax system on
internal combustion engine vehicles in line with NDC targets by end-2025. More specifically, the
Government intends to put in place a legal framework that ensures coherence between the different parts
of the system, notably between the application of registration fees, import duties, taxes, and other
regulations relevant in terms of their impact on the promotion of cleaner, more efficient cars (RM14).
23. The authorities are pursuing an ongoing effort of consolidation and integration in the
budget of fiscal and para-fiscal operations. They intend to continue to integrate into the budget
financing from the windows (guichets) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) windows (Global Environment Facility (GEF), Green Climate Fund (GCF) and Adaptation Fund
(AF) and associated environmental taxes and earmarked fees, listed in MEFP Annex I, and align with the
NDC where applicable (RM15). This should be included in the 2025 draft finances law, which should be
adopted by Government in October 2024.
24. In parallel, the authorities are pursuing efforts to develop alternatives to fossil fuel and
increase production capacity in line with the NDC target of reaching 45 percent of renewable energy
by 2030 against 30 percent in 2023. According to the authorities’ estimates an additional 250 MW
capacity of renewable energy will be needed to achieve that goal. To raise private finance, as well as to
enable price discovery and ensure least cost, competitive procurement is critical as highlighted by the
CCDR. They intend to complete the tendering process for the development, construction, and operation of
solar power plants to help achieve the NDC targets. In this context, the competitive procurement processes
for the independent power producers selected following the above-mentioned tenders must be completed
by the end of 2025 for a solar power capacity to be installed equivalent to at least 100 MW (RM16).
25. The above reform measures will complement existing adaptation and mitigation efforts.
For instance, notable reforms supported by the EU, are ongoing to improve traceability in the cocoa
sector at the national level—a key measure to combat deforestation and emissions from inappropriate
land use necessary for Côte d’Ivoire to continue exporting cocoa to Europe, by far its single largest
export market. The authorities are also developing carbon credit initiatives from establishing a national
register for carbon credits to implementing a regulatory framework for managing carbon credits
supported by the World Bank, the EU, and the UNDP. Comprehensive reforms are underway to improve
water resources management across sectors (agriculture, drinking water, hydropower) and regions to
fight water scarcity and improve water security.
Box 1. Carbon Taxation and the Role of the Fuel Price Mechanism
Maintaining fuel price stability in Côte d’Ivoire has entailed significant budgetary risks. The Ivorian fuel pricing
mechanism is designed to automatically trigger a fuel price
Fuel Price Mechanism Scenarios
change of up to 40 CFA/L each month in response to (CFA per liter)
1200
international oil price movements. Emergency measures 1100
Observed prices No adjustment Mechanism as described
starting in late 2021 and 2022 suspended the mechanism and 1000
600
periodic stepwise and large increases in fuel prices were
500
eventually undertaken by the authorities, with limited impact 400
on inflation and without significant public protests. Staff
Apr-17
Dec-17
Aug-18
Apr-19
Dec-19
Aug-20
Apr-21
Dec-21
Aug-22
Apr-23
Dec-23
analysis suggests that in the absence of the fuel price
Souces: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff calculations.
stabilization approach taken by the authorities,1 Côte d’Ivoire
would have experienced greater domestic price variation in line Note: Observed prices are the prices at pump. No
adjustment prices are calculated as: PPI Max + excise tax
with international prices, while tax revenues between 2019 and
– lissage + tax revenue + distribution costs, where PPI
2023 would have been higher on average (though with Max indicates international prices plus transport costs
variation across years). In addition, recent prices at the pump and fees; the “lissage” term was introduced in 2021 to
could have been lower than observed as of January 2024. further smooth changes in domestic prices (and is thus
removed from this price series); and tax revenue
Fixing fuel prices runs counter to NDC goals. The effective considers all statutory taxes collected in customs (does
carbon tax (i.e., the difference between supply costs and not include changes to the pricing mechanism
consumer prices) on fuels is intrinsically linked to the implied introduced in 2020). The “mechanism as described”
tax rates under the current fuel price setting mechanism. price series applies the smoothing mechanism to the
unadjusted price series (domestic prices only change
Keeping domestic fuel prices fixed results in the erosion of
when there is an international price variation of
effective carbon tax when international prices are high. This 2.5 percent or more in the previous quarter, and
reduces the incentive to reduce consumption of fossil fuels, domestic price variation is constrained to 40 CFA/L
which would in turn increase GHG emissions. monthly).
Fuel prices in Côte d’Ivoire can comfortably accommodate Liquid Fuels Pricing, 2019-23
(CFA per litrer)
carbon taxes, but there is variation across types of fuels. Staff 1200
Supply cost VAT Global Warming
Local Air Pollution Vehicle externalities Consumer Price
analysis shows that gasoline and kerosene prices are already 1000
diesel and LPG are still highly subsidized (when environmental 600
The social impact of fuel price liberalization remains an important concern. A carbon tax and price reform can
be implemented with compensatory well-targeted cash transfers, to limit its effect on vulnerable groups (Annex I). In
addition, gradual implementation along the safeguards in the automatic pricing mechanism can avoid large shocks
to prices and provide time for consumers to adapt.
___________________
1
The authorities’ emergency response measures were made effective by overriding the automaticity of the price changes
defined in the design of the existing fuel pricing mechanism.
27. Financing assurances, use of funds, and relation to the EFF/ECF arrangements. The
EFF/ECF arrangements are fully financed for the next 12 months and there are good prospects for its
financing over the remainder of the arrangement. The RSF funds will be used for budget support and
are assumed to substitute more expensive domestic financing, in keeping with the authorities’
commitment to fiscal consolidation under the EFF/ECF arrangements in line with the WAEMU deficit
target of 3 percent of GDP by 2025. Therefore, the access to the RSF will not be used to close any new
financing gap. The ambitious DRM agenda of the ECF/EFF arrangements would be complemented by
the national strategy on carbon taxation under the RSF. Other mutually enhancing synergies include
improvements in policy coordination, public financial management and further financial market
development in line with Côte d’Ivoire’s role as a regional financial center.
28. Capacity to repay the Fund remains adequate, albeit subject to risks. Fund credit
outstanding is projected to rise from 4.2 percent of GDP in 2024 to 5.3 percent of GDP at its peak in
2026, above the 75th percentile of PRGT comparator countries. Debt service indicators for government
revenue and exports would peak in 2024, also at elevated levels above the 75th percentile for
comparators. Mitigating factors include Côte d’Ivoire’s moderate risk of debt distress rating, solid
economic fundamentals, including for the long-term, access to the regional reserve pool, and one of
the best credit ratings in sub-Saharan Africa, underpinned by the successful eurobond issuance in
January 2024.
29. Safeguards assessment. The last assessment of the BCEAO, completed in August 2023, found
that the central bank continues to have well-established audit arrangements and a strong control
environment. The BCEAO is in the process of addressing the safeguards assessment's
recommendation to align its Statute with changes in the 2019 cooperation agreement with France.
RM 5. Implement a climate
insurance system including a pilot in
Exposed and vulnerable agriculture sector
the cotton industry.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
17
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Text Figure 4. Capacity to Repay Indicators Compared to UCT Arrangements for PRGT
Countries
30. Risks to the RSF are manageable. The main risks relate to implementing the ambitious
reform agenda which could lead to social tensions, in the context of a challenging regional situation
and upcoming presidential elections. The reform agenda would need to be accompanied by an
effective communication campaign to involve all stakeholders. The authorities’ strong ownership of
the program, track record, and synergies with the underlying EFF/ECF arrangements, should help
mitigate any implementation risks, as should strong involvement of development partners to
address climate-related issues.
31. Catalytic effect and collaboration with development partners. The RSF financing is
expected to catalyze further official financing as well as private financing, notably through the
creation of a framework for green and sustainable financing, which could also serve as a model for
the WAEMU region, given Côte d’Ivoire’s role as a financial center. Development partners have been
heavily involved in Côte d’Ivoire green agenda and a development partners’ group for climate
change was recently formed to foster collaboration, create synergies, and ensure complementary of
the different agendas (Annex I, Section C).
STAFF APPRAISAL
32. Climate change is paramount for Côte d’Ivoire’s economy. As the country is still heavily
dependent on agriculture and the secondary and tertiary activities are concentrated in the coastal
areas, climate change exacerbates economic vulnerabilities. Agricultural productivity has already
been severely affected by climate-related shocks and attendant output losses. Building resilience
against climate change is needed to prevent adverse economic effects and safeguard Côte d’Ivoire’s
ambitious development agenda and inclusive growth.
33. The Ivorian authorities have embraced the challenges of climate change in several
government initiatives including the NDP. In addition to being a pillar of the NDP, climate
change is laid out in the revised NDC with an implementation cost estimated at US$22 billion for
both adaptation and mitigation. The country was also host of the UNCCD COP15 to combat
desertification during which they launched the Abidjan Legacy Programme. A new code of the
environment has been submitted to parliament and a climate change law is under preparation to
strengthen the institutional and regulatory framework. In addition to strong adaptation efforts,
Côte d’Ivoire’s is also committed to achieving zero net-emissions by 2030.
34. Implementing reforms supported by the RSF arrangement will be key to building
resilience against climate change, protecting the country’s economy, and making progress on
mitigation objectives. The country needs to take both a transversal approach to strengthen its
institutional, regulatory, and legal frameworks, including governance and PFM, as well as a sectoral
approach to tackle each sector’s specific vulnerabilities. As such, agriculture needs to become
resilient to ensure food security and farmers’ livelihoods, while industries have to face climate
shocks by integrating climate considerations into investment choices. The reform measures are
appropriately balanced between adaptation and mitigation efforts, and entail important synergies
with other national strategies, development partners’ support and the economic program
supported by the EFF/ECF arrangements.
35. Côte d’Ivoire needs to generate sufficient public and private resources to implement
its ambitious agenda. The authorities aim to develop the full green finance strategy platform to
leverage funding. As the domestic market is limited, the authorities are considering external
financing sources such as development partners, blended financing, ESG bonds as successfully
issued in January 2024, and international climate funds which could unlock significant private
financing. Private investment is expected to play a major role in financing the NDP. Green finance
reforms under the RSF will strengthen Côte d’Ivoire’s role as a financial center and benefit the
WAEMU region. Technical assistance will be important for capacity development in this area.
36. Coordination among developments partners will be key for impactful reforms.
Development partners are heavily involved in Côte d’Ivoire in all aspects of climate change, and
their coordination has been reinforced through regular meetings since 2023. The reform measures
are expected to contribute to the coordination efforts and catalyze additional donors’ participation.
37. Staff supports the authorities’ request for an RSF arrangement and commend the
authorities for the strong ownership of their reform agenda. The 30-month RSF arrangement
will support the authorities’ commitment to build resilience against climate change through
ambitious mitigation and adaptation reform measures and enhance their economic resilience and
sustainability—by: (i) supporting policy reforms that reduce risks associated with longer-term
structural challenges, and (ii) augmenting policy space and financial buffers to mitigate the risks
arising from such longer-term structural challenges—thereby contributing to Côte d’Ivoire’s
prospective balance of payments stability. Staff encourages the authorities to leverage the RSF to
exploit synergies with other official financing and catalyze further private financing.
2/
Public Sector Debt
Central government debt, gross 50.9 56.8 58.1 57.3 55.8 54.5 53.7 53.0
External debt 30.9 34.5 35.1 34.3 32.9 31.9 31.1 30.1
External debt-service due (CFAF billions) 803 973 1,325 1,838 2,063 1,937 1,808.0 2,042.2
Percent of exports of goods and services 8.9 9.0 11.6 14.0 14.1 12.4 10.7 11.3
Percent of government revenue 13.1 15.1 17.5 21.8 21.7 18.1 15.3 15.9
Memorandum Items
Nominal GDP (CFAF billions) 39,821 43,682 47,825 52,125 56,570 61,337 66,379.9 71,770.0
Nominal exchange rate (CFAF/US$, period average) 554 622 … … … … … …
Nominal GDP at market prices (US$ billions) 72 70 79 87 94 102 110.0 118.7
Population (million) 29.4 30.2 31.1 32.0 32.9 33.8 34.8 35.8
Nominal GDP per capita (CFAF thousands) 1,355 1,445 1,538 1,630 1,720 1,813 1,907 2,004.7
Nominal GDP per capita (US$) 2,445 2,322 2,536 2,711 2,860 3,009 3,160 3,316.9
Real GDP per capita growth (percent) 4.4 3.7 3.4 3.5 3.4 3.3 3.2 3.1
Sources: Ivorian authorities, World Bank, and IMF staff estimates and projections.
1/ Defined as total revenue minus total expenditure, excluding all interest and foreign-financed investment expenditure.
2/ Does not include debt guarantees.
Current account -1,593 -3,348 -2,760 -1,984 -1,511 -1,583 -1,604 -1,685
Current account excl. grants -1,778 -3,582 -3,082 -2,233 -1,721 -1,772 -1,815 -1,900
Trade balance 1,692 670 1,496 2,499 3,354 3,692 4,172 4,559
Exports, f.o.b. 8,491 10,236 10,799 12,387 13,754 14,727 15,930 17,041
Of which: cocoa 3,314 3,121 3,747 4,648 5,261 5,258 5,485 5,705
Of which: crude oil and refined oil products 957 1,841 1,790 1,740 1,957 2,268 2,462 2,589
Imports, f.o.b. 6,799 9,565 9,302 9,888 10,400 11,034 11,759 12,482
Of which: crude oil and refined oil products 1,278 3,023 2,838 2,809 2,988 3,171 3,324 3,482
Services (net) -1,670 -2,359 -2,439 -2,502 -2,715 -2,944 -3,186 -3,445
Primary Income (net) -1,240 -1,441 -1,530 -1,616 -1,754 -1,901 -2,124 -2,297
Of which: interest on public debt -435 -525 -631 -657 -711 -695 -725 -758
Secondary Income (net) -375 -218 -287 -365 -396 -429 -465 -502
General Government 11 194 202 205 127 68 60 0
Other Sectors -385 -412 -489 -570 -522 -498 -525 -502
Capital and financial account 2,682 2,741 1,010 2,115 1,033 1,868 2,635 2,707
Financial account (excl. exceptionnal financing) 2,591 2,701 890 2,071 949 1,747 2,485 2,491
Foreign direct investment 614 786 813 938 1,075 1,227 1,394 1,543
Portfolio investment, net 363 401 -195 470 83 112 112 31
Acquisition of financial assets -413 -353 -393 -413 -400 -422 -434 -469
Incurrence of liabilities 776 754 198 883 483 534 545 500
Of which: Eurobonds 608 0 0 575 300 350 350 400
Other investment, net 1,631 1,534 874 1,506 736 907 979 917
Official, net 1,018 1,279 1,746 357 204 586 1,051 1,143
Project loans 802 1,440 1,751 1,033 988 1,306 1,521 1,589
Central government amortization due -330 -686 -595 -983 -1,122 -1,084 -942 -1,104
Net acquisition of financial assets -12 -14 -13 -13 -13 -13 -13 -13
Nonofficial, net 621 255 -872 1,149 532 321 -72 -226
Overall balance 1,011 -607 -1,750 131 -478 285 1,032 1,022
Residual Gap 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Memorandum items:
Overall balance (percent of GDP) 2.5 -1.4 -3.7 0.3 -0.8 0.5 1.6 1.4
Current account inc. grants (percent of GDP) -4.0 -7.7 -5.8 -3.8 -2.7 -2.6 -2.4 -2.3
Current account exc. grants (percent of GDP) -4.5 -8.2 -6.4 -4.3 -3.0 -2.9 -2.7 -2.6
Trade balance (percent of GDP) 4.2 1.5 3.1 4.8 5.9 6.0 6.3 6.4
WAEMU gross official reserves (billions of US$) 24.2 18.5 … … … … … …
(percent of broad money) … … … … … … … …
(months of WAEMU imports of GNFS) 5.1 4.2 … … … … … …
Nominal GDP 39,821 43,682 47,825 52,125 56,570 61,337 66,380 71,770
Exchange rate (CFAF/US$) average 580 619 … … … … … …
Exchange rate (CFAF/US$) end-of-period 554 622 … … … … … …
Current account -4.0 -7.7 -5.8 -3.8 -2.7 -2.6 -2.4 -2.3
Current account excl. grants -4.5 -8.2 -6.4 -4.3 -3.0 -2.9 -2.7 -2.6
Trade balance 4.2 1.5 3.1 4.8 5.9 6.0 6.3 6.4
Exports, f.o.b. 21.3 23.4 22.6 23.8 24.3 24.0 24.0 23.7
Of which: cocoa 8.3 7.1 7.8 8.9 9.3 8.6 8.3 7.9
Of which: crude oil and refined oil products 2.4 4.2 3.7 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.7 3.6
Imports, f.o.b. 17.1 21.9 19.5 19.0 18.4 18.0 17.7 17.4
Of which: crude oil and refined oil products 3.2 6.9 5.9 5.4 5.3 5.2 5.0 4.9
Services (net) -4.2 -5.4 -5.1 -4.8 -4.8 -4.8 -4.8 -4.8
Primary Income (net) -3.1 -3.3 -3.2 -3.1 -3.1 -3.1 -3.2 -3.2
Of which: interest on public debt -1.1 -1.2 -1.3 -1.3 -1.3 -1.1 -1.1 -1.1
Secondary Income (net) -0.9 -0.5 -0.6 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7
General Government 0.0 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.0
Other Sectors -1.0 -0.9 -1.0 -1.1 -0.9 -0.8 -0.8 -0.7
Capital and financial account 6.7 6.3 2.1 4.1 1.8 3.0 4.0 3.8
Capital account 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.3
Financial account (excl. exceptionnal financing) 6.5 6.2 1.9 4.0 1.7 2.8 3.7 3.5
Foreign direct investment 1.5 1.8 1.7 1.8 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.2
Portfolio investment, net 0.9 0.9 -0.4 0.9 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.0
Acquisition of financial assets -1.0 -0.8 -0.8 -0.8 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7
Incurrence of liabilities 1.9 1.7 0.4 1.7 0.9 0.9 0.8 0.7
Of which: Eurobonds 1.5 0.0 0.0 1.1 0.5 0.6 0.5 0.6
Other investment, net 4.1 3.5 1.8 2.9 1.3 1.5 1.5 1.3
Official, net 2.6 2.9 3.7 0.7 0.4 1.0 1.6 1.6
Project loans 2.0 3.3 3.7 2.0 1.7 2.1 2.3 2.2
Central government amortization due -0.8 -1.6 -1.2 -1.9 -2.0 -1.8 -1.4 -1.5
Net acquisition of financial assets 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Nonofficial, net 1.6 0.6 -1.8 2.2 0.9 0.5 -0.1 -0.3
Errors and omissions -0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Overall balance 2.5 -1.4 -3.7 0.3 -0.8 0.5 1.6 1.4
Financing Gap 0.0 0.0 1.3 1.1 1.1 0.5 0.0 0.0
Use of Fund Credit: ECF/EFF 0.0 0.0 1.3 1.1 1.1 0.5 0.0 0.0
Residual Gap 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
RSF Disbursement 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.6 0.3 0.0 0.0
Memorandum items:
Overall balance (percent of GDP) 2.5 -1.4 -3.7 0.3 -0.8 0.5 1.6 1.4
Current account inc. grants (percent of GDP) -4.0 -7.7 -5.8 -3.8 -2.7 -2.6 -2.4 -2.3
Current account exc. grants (percent of GDP) -4.5 -8.2 -6.4 -4.3 -3.0 -2.9 -2.7 -2.6
Trade balance (percent of GDP) 4.2 1.5 3.1 4.8 5.9 6.0 6.3 6.4
WAEMU gross official reserves (billions of US$) 24.2 18.5 … … … … … …
(percent of broad money) … … … … … … … …
(months of WAEMU imports of GNFS) 5.1 4.2 … … … … … …
Nominal GDP (billions of CFA francs) 39,821 43,682 47,825 52,125 56,570 61,337 66,380 71,770
Exchange rate (CFAF/US$) average 580 619 … … … … … …
Exchange rate (CFAF/US$) end-of-period 554 622 … … … … … …
Residual Gap 0 0 0
Table 4a. Côte d’Ivoire: Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 2021-28
(CFA billions)
2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028
Prel. Program
Total revenue and grants 6,295 6,684 7,872 8,696 9,727 10,911 12,001 13,091
Total revenue 6,110 6,451 7,550 8,447 9,517 10,722 11,790 12,876
Tax revenue 5,251 5,617 6,638 7,532 8,518 9,639 10,616 11,606
Non-earmarked taxes 5,042 5,304 6,243 7,074 8,077 9,173 10,086 11,033
Direct taxes 1,402 1,630 1,857 2,175 2,455 2,754 3,120 3,488
Indirect taxes 3,640 3,674 4,386 4,900 5,622 6,419 6,966 7,545
of which taxes on project spending 155 166 178 161 208 222 157 163
Earmarked taxes 209 356 395 458 441 466 530 573
Nontax revenue 860 834 912 915 999 1,083 1,174 1,269
Grants, of which 185 234 322 249 210 189 211 215
Project grants 92 40 119 44 83 121 151 215
Total expenditure 8,257 9,666 10,382 10,806 11,442 12,767 13,971 15,224
Current expenditure 5,930 6,526 6,876 6,799 7,864 8,578 9,241 10,011
Wages and salaries 1,860 2,007 2,246 2,332 2,681 2,920 3,160 3,431
Social security benefits 371 390 422 444 566 583 657 746
Subsidies and other current transfers 907 768 648 565 594 712 856 926
Other current expenditure 1,548 1,873 1,695 1,740 1,975 2,241 2,319 2,508
Expenditure corresponding to eamarked taxes 209 356 395 458 441 466 530 573
Interest due 785 970 1,166 1,197 1,350 1,387 1,475 1,569
On domestic debt 330 448 540 540 638 692 749 810
On external debt 455 523 626 657 712 695 725 759
Capital expenditure 2,327 3,141 3,506 4,007 3,578 4,189 4,730 5,213
Domestically financed 1,394 1,668 1,650 2,930 2,506 2,762 3,057 3,407
of which counterpart funds for project taxes 155 166 178 161 208 222 157 163
Foreign-financed, of which 932 1,473 1,856 1,077 1,072 1,428 1,673 1,805
Foreign loan-financed 840 1,433 1,737 1,033 989 1,307 1,522 1,590
Basic primary balance -429 -772 191 -85 497 770 966 1,026
Overall balance, including grants -1,962 -2,982 -2,510 -2,110 -1,715 -1,856 -1,970 -2,133
Overall balance, excluding grants -2,146 -3,216 -2,832 -2,359 -1,925 -2,045 -2,181 -2,348
Memorandum items:
Nominal GDP 39,821 43,682 47,825 52,125 56,570 61,337 66,380 71,770
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff estimates and projections.
1/ Excludes disbursements of Fund resources channeled through the Central Bank. 2023 program column corrected for reclassification of IMF
2/ In the CFA franc zone, Fund resources are channeled via the regional central bank that provides equivalent domestic currency credit to the relevant
government.
Table 4b. Côte d’Ivoire: Fiscal Operations of the Central Government, 2021-28
(Percent of GDP)
2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028
Prel. Program
Total revenue and grants 15.8 15.3 16.5 16.7 17.2 17.8 18.1 18.2
Total revenue 15.3 14.8 15.8 16.2 16.8 17.5 17.8 17.9
Tax revenue 13.2 12.9 13.9 14.5 15.1 15.7 16.0 16.2
Non-earmarked taxes 12.7 12.1 13.1 13.6 14.3 15.0 15.2 15.4
Direct taxes 3.5 3.7 3.9 4.2 4.3 4.5 4.7 4.9
Indirect taxes 9.1 8.4 9.2 9.4 9.9 10.5 10.5 10.5
of which taxes on project spending 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.2
Earmarked taxes 0.5 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.8
Nontax revenue 2.2 1.9 1.9 1.8 1.8 1.8 1.8 1.8
Grants, of which 0.5 0.5 0.7 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3
Project grants 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.3
Total expenditure 20.7 22.1 21.7 20.7 20.2 20.8 21.0 21.2
Current expenditure 14.9 14.9 14.4 13.0 13.9 14.0 13.9 13.9
Wages and salaries 4.7 4.6 4.7 4.5 4.7 4.8 4.8 4.8
Social security benefits 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
Subsidies and other current transfers 2.3 1.8 1.4 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.3
Other current expenditure 3.9 4.3 3.5 3.3 3.5 3.7 3.5 3.5
Expenditure corresponding to eamarked taxes 0.5 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.8
Interest due 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.3 2.4 2.3 2.2 2.2
On domestic debt 0.8 1.0 1.1 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1
On external debt 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.1 1.1 1.1
Capital expenditure 5.8 7.2 7.3 7.7 6.3 6.8 7.1 7.3
Domestically financed 3.5 3.8 3.4 5.6 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7
of which counterpart funds for project taxes 0.4 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.2
Foreign-financed, of which 2.3 3.4 3.9 2.1 1.9 2.3 2.5 2.5
Foreign loan-financed 2.1 3.3 3.6 2.0 1.7 2.1 2.3 2.2
Basic primary balance -1.1 -1.8 0.4 -0.2 0.9 1.3 1.5 1.4
Overall balance, including grants -4.9 -6.8 -5.2 -4.0 -3.0 -3.0 -3.0 -3.0
Overall balance, excluding grants -5.4 -7.4 -5.9 -4.5 -3.4 -3.3 -3.3 -3.3
Change in float (excl. on debt service) 0.0 -0.3 -0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Overall balance (cash basis) -5.0 -7.1 -5.3 -4.1 -3.0 -3.0 -3.0 -3.0
Expected Financing from Official Sources (excluding IMF) 214 159 189
EFF/ECF disbursements 597 600 301
Memorandum items
Fiscal Balance excluding RSF spending -1,890 -1,371 -1,659
Financing excluding RSF disbursement 1,079 612 1,168
Domestic financing without RSF 453 447 596
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff estimates and projections.
Net foreign assets 4,206 3,886 2,634 3,605 4,076 4,868 5,909 6,938
Central bank 2,944 2,304 1,642 2,131 2,556 3,302 4,300 5,288
Other depository corporations 1,262 1,582 992 1,474 1,520 1,566 1,609 1,650
Net domestic assets 11,281 12,993 14,806 16,669 18,453 20,106 21,796 23,786
Net credit to the government 1/ 4,617 5,894 6,264 7,522 8,755 9,692 10,277 11,033
Central Bank 1,505 1,459 1,863 2,417 3,134 3,476 3,336 3,156
Other depository corporations 3,112 4,435 4,399 5,105 5,621 6,217 6,942 7,877
Credit to the economy 9,139 9,807 11,399 12,378 13,205 14,216 15,634 17,201
Crop credits 672 589 672 881 998 998 1,041 1,082
Other credit (including customs bills) 8,468 9,218 10,726 11,497 12,206 13,218 14,593 16,119
Other items (net) (assets = +) -2,475 -2,708 -2,857 -3,231 -3,507 -3,802 -4,115 -4,449
Broad money 15,487 16,879 17,440 20,274 22,529 24,974 27,705 30,724
Currency in circulation 3,721 3,973 4,019 4,367 4,853 5,405 6,037 6,741
Deposits 11,762 12,901 13,417 15,902 17,671 19,564 21,661 23,975
Deposits at the Central Bank 4.1 4.1 4.3 5.0 5.5 6.1 6.8 7.5
Memorandum item:
Velocity of circulation 2.6 2.6 2.7 2.6 2.5 2.5 2.4 2.3
Net foreign assets 8.2 -2.1 -7.4 1.5 2.3 3.5 4.2 3.7
Net domestic assets 10.6 11.1 10.7 8.5 8.8 7.3 6.8 7.2
Net credit to the government 5.4 8.2 2.2 5.8 6.1 4.2 2.3 2.7
Central bank 5.5 -0.3 2.4 3.0 3.5 1.5 -0.6 -0.6
Other depository corporations -0.1 8.5 -0.2 2.8 2.5 2.6 2.9 3.4
Credit to the economy 7.8 4.3 9.4 4.2 4.1 4.5 5.7 5.7
Broad money 18.7 9.0 3.3 10.1 11.1 10.9 10.9 10.9
(Changes in percent of previous end-of-year)
Net foreign assets 34.0 -7.6 -32.2 36.8 13.1 19.4 21.4 17.4
Net domestic assets 13.9 15.2 14.0 12.6 10.7 9.0 8.4 9.1
Net credit to the government 18.0 27.7 6.3 20.1 16.4 10.7 6.0 7.4
Central bank 91.7 -3.1 27.7 29.8 29.6 10.9 -4.0 -5.4
Other depository corporations -0.5 42.5 -0.8 16.0 10.1 10.6 11.7 13.5
Credit to the economy 12.5 7.3 16.2 8.6 6.7 7.7 10.0 10.0
Broad money 18.7 9.0 3.3 16.3 11.1 10.9 10.9 10.9
Sources: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) and IMF staff estimates and projections.
1/ Includes the net use of Fund resources channeled through the Central Bank
June
Capital Adequacy
Regulatory capital to risk-weighted assets (CAR) 8.7 7.9 9.0 9.5 10.5 11.6 12.6 13.1 13.3
Regulatory tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets 7.1 6.9 7.9 8.6 9.7 10.9 12.1 12.7 12.7
General provisions to risk-weighted assets 9.5 7.1 6.6 5.7 6.0 6.1 5.7 5.2 …
Capital to total assets 3.9 4.3 5.1 6.3 6.2 6.5 7.2 7.3 6.4
Asset Quality
Total loans to total assets 57.1 57.3 57.3 58.8 57.0 53.5 52.0 51.2 …
Concentration: Loans to the 5 biggest borrowers to capital 145.8 129.1 108.9 87.4 66.5 53.8 53.0 84.2 …
Sectoral composition of loans 1/
Agriculture, forestry and fisheries 5.9 6.4 8.0 9.2 4.7 5.8 4.0 5.7 5.8
Extractive industries 2.3 2.2 1.5 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.7 0.2 0.4
Manufacturing industries 25.1 24.1 23.9 23.0 20.5 18.7 16.5 15.6 18.4
Electricity, water, gas 6.3 8.4 11.2 13.2 9.0 10.7 11.5 16.0 13.3
Construction, public works 3.3 5.9 6.0 5.4 6.4 5.4 5.8 5.9 6.4
Commerce, restaurants, hotels 31.6 27.3 21.9 25.9 30.2 32.0 35.7 31.5 32.6
Transport, storage and communications 9.3 11.4 13.9 9.3 12.9 11.3 8.9 9.3 9.0
Insurance, real estate, business services 11.4 8.5 7.9 9.0 9.9 11.3 10.1 9.3 8.2
Miscellaneous services 4.8 5.8 5.7 4.5 6.1 4.6 6.9 6.5 5.8
Non-performing loans to total gross loans 10.4 9.1 9.8 9.3 8.4 8.8 8.9 7.8 7.2
General provisions to non-performing loans 66.6 70.5 63.0 64.9 70.2 68.8 66.3 69.5 70.0
Non-performing loans net of provisions to total loans 3.7 2.9 3.8 3.5 2.7 2.9 3.2 2.5 2.3
Non-performing loans net of provisions to capital 54.2 37.6 43.0 32.5 24.4 23.7 22.1 17.2 …
Liquidity
Liquid assets to total assets 35.5 33.7 32.0 31.7 29.6 29.6 28.7 26.0 …
Liquid assets to total deposits 48.6 48.1 46.9 46.0 42.6 41.4 38.3 36.2 …
Total loans to total deposits 84.1 87.2 89.5 90.7 87.2 79.7 73.8 75.2 …
Total deposits to total liabilities 72.9 70.2 68.2 68.9 69.4 71.4 74.9 71.9 …
Source: BCEAO.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Table 7. Côte d’Ivoire: Capacity to Repay the Fund, 2024-44
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044
Net Use of Fund Credit (millions of SDRs) 779.3 888.3 422.1 -193.1 -253.6 -351.4 -436.0 -450.1 -462.5 -429.5 -300.4 -204.8 -118.4 -97.6 -97.6 -97.6 -97.6 -97.6 -97.6 -97.6 -94.5
Disbursements 1,085.2 1,170.2 615.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Repayments and Repurchases 306.0 281.9 193.4 193.1 253.6 351.4 436.0 450.1 462.5 429.5 300.4 204.8 118.4 97.6 97.6 97.6 97.6 97.6 97.6 97.6 94.5
Memorandum items:
Exports of goods and services (billions of CFA francs) 13,168.4 14,602.3 15,646.6 16,925.9 18,118.0 19,249.9 20,429.5 21,650.9 22,866.7 24,163.9 25,608.6 27,121.0 28,725.8 30,427.5 32,264.5 34,249.5 36,394.9 38,658.3 41,103.9 43,747.2 46,560.5
Government revenue and grants (billions of CFA francs) 8,695.6 9,727.0 10,911.1 12,001.5 13,091.0 14,445.0 15,782.2 17,037.2 18,464.2 19,928.8 21,597.2 23,350.4 25,250.7 27,306.6 29,518.9 31,869.0 34,407.2 37,163.0 39,465.6 45,380.7 52,182.3
External debt (billions of CFA francs) 13,140.8 11,807.8 10,765.3 9,881.1 8,862.0 7,578.5 6,321.6 5,052.4 4,020.7 3,401.7 3,114.0 2,896.5 2,738.6 2,606.7 2,303.9 2,015.2 1,744.8 1,676.0 1,609.9 1,546.4 1,485.4
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
32
2023 2024
June September December March June September December
Prelim.
PC Outturn Status IT Outturn Status PC Status IT PC IT PC
Outturn
A. Performance Criteria
Floor on the overall fiscal balance (incl. grants) -1338 -1029 MET -2007 -1507 MET -2514 -2508 MET -507 -1,085 -1,505 -2,110
Ceiling on net domestic financing (incl. the issuance of securities in CFAF) 777 749 MET 952 952 MET 1160 1014 MET 14 594 1,036 1,355
Ceiling on the present value of new external debt (with a maturity of more than one year) contracted or
2533 1434 MET 4242 … MET 4650 2639 MET 1157 2,205 3,233 4,286
guaranteed by the central government (millions of US$)
Floor on government tax revenue 3079 3254 MET 4620 4791 MET 6306 6507 MET 1643 3,538 5,299 7,156
B. Indicative Targets
Floor on targeted social spending 307 345 MET 700 736 MET 949 970 MET 230 462 765 989
Ceiling on expenditure by treasury advance 167 150 MET 263 259 MET 345 291 MET 82 192 307 446
Floor on net reduction of central government amounts payable (- = reduction) -132 -136 MET -78 -82 -25 -26 MET -54 -41 -33 -25
Floor on basic primary balance -162 164 MET -130 295 MET 187 … TBC 55 86 150 -20
Memorandum Items:
Program grants (millions of US$) 2/ 162 96 … 96 96 … 324 194 … 0 160 160 329
Program loans (millions of US$) 2/ 349 333 … 503 436 … 1266 952 … 957 982 1022 1266
Project grants (millions of US$) 2/ 67 34 … 94 77 … 191 114 … 17 36 53 70
Project loans (millions of US$) 2/ 1139 645 … 1366 928 … 2287 1382 … 353 952 1284 1656
Cumulative C2D 80 100 … 100 … 200 141 … 20 80 140 200
Total pro-poor spending 1623 1623 … 2403 … 3318 3497 … 748 1655 2467 3405
Sources: Ivoirian authorities; and IMF staff estimates.
1/ Cumulative amount from January 1, 2023 for 2023 targets, and from January 1, 2024 for 2024 targets.
2/ Converted with US$/CFAF program exchange rate.
Table 10. Côte d’Ivoire: Structural Benchmarks, 2023–24
Reform Area Structural Benchmark Rationale Status Due Date
Prepare and implement a plan to manage and collect Boost domestic revenue to preserve End-September
outstanding tax arrears. fiscal and debt sustainability and create Met 2023
fiscal space for public investment and
poverty reduction.
Cabinet approval of a Medium-Term Revenue Mobilization Boost domestic revenue to preserve End-May 2024
strategy (MTRS), with revenue targets and a timeline, and fiscal and debt sustainability and create
Revenue
publication of a comprehensive summary.1 fiscal space for public investment and
Mobilization
poverty reduction.
Strengthen the module relating to automated VAT Boost domestic revenue and strengthen End-June 2024
management by incorporating the control of the VAT 2024 budget measures.
deduction collected at customs.
Issue an ordinance to streamline the provisions relating to Boost domestic revenue and strengthen End-September
exemptions linked to the investment code. 2024 budget measures. 2024
Approve a ministerial decree by the Council of Ministers to Improve the effectiveness of the End-May 2024
(i) designate the AML/CFT supervisors for the real estate AML/CFT framework.
agents, dealers in precious metals and stones, casinos and
gambling establishments, business agents (agents
Governance
d’affaires), and trust and company service providers; and
(ii) set out their powers and responsibilities to undertake
risk-based supervision in line with FATF Recommendation
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
28.
1
See https://www.tax-platform.org/medium-term-revenue-strategy for examples of such publications.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
33
34
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Table 10. Côte d’Ivoire: Structural Benchmarks, 2023–24 (concluded)
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
Adopt by the council of ministers the draft law on (i) Define general objectives for public debt and End-
national debt policy. prudential rules; (ii) establish public debt September
commitment procedures for ministerial 2023
departments and state agencies; (iii) rationalize
the framework for debt operation and debt
management; (iv) clarify the rules and purposes Met
for government on-lending; (v) and strengthen
the institutional framework for public debt
management.
PFM Treasury Single Account (TSA): Adopt by the government Improve cash management and minimize End-
a timetable for closing accounts with commercial banks. financial cost. Met December
2023
Enforce e-procurement to be used by an average of at Improve the efficiency and transparency in End-
least 10 percent of the operations for which the procurement. December
Met
procurement procedures will start from October 2023. 2023
Enforce e-procurement to be used by at least 50 percent Improve the efficiency and transparency in End-July
of all ordinary operations (those with value larger than procurement. 2024
100 million CFAF) between January 1, 2024, and June 30,
2024.
Complete a mid-term review of the National Strategy for Improve the access to financial services, End-May
Financial Inclusion to take into account the government's particularly for disadvantaged populations. 2024
Financial sector new priorities in relation to the objectives of the NDP,
particularly access to financial services for women.
Table 11. Côte d’Ivoire: Reviews and Purchases/Disbursements Under the 40-month EFF/ECF Arrangements, 2023-26
May 24, 2023 Executive Board approval of the ECF/EFF arrangements. 371.657 123.886 247.771 57.143 19.048 38.095
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
35
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Table 12. Côte d’Ivoire: Reviews and Proposed Schedule of Disbursements Under the
Resilience and Sustainability Facility, 2024-26
RSF
Date of availability Condition (implementation of RMs) (in million of SDR) (in percent of quota)
Table 13. Côte d’Ivoire: Decomposition of Public Debt Stock and Debt Service by Creditors,
2022-25
Debt Stock
1/
(end of period) Debt Service
Debt Stock 2022
(end of period) 2023 2024Debt2025
Service 2023 2024 2025
Debt Stock (end of period) Debt Service
(In US$ billions) (Percent2022
total debt) (Percent GDP) 2023
(In 2024 2025
US$ billions) 2023 2024
(Percent 2025
GDP)
2022 2023 2024 2025 2023 2024 2025
Total 40.0 (Percent total debt)
(In US$ billions) 100.0 (Percent GDP)
56.7 (In 4.5
US$ billions)
5.5 5.9 (Percent
6.2 GDP) 6.8
7.0
(In US$ billions) (Percent total debt) (Percent GDP) (In US$ billions) (Percent GDP)
Total
External 40.0
24.3 100.0
60.8 56.7
34.5 4.5
1.6 5.5
2.2 5.9
2.9 6.2
2.2 7.0
2.8 6.8
3.4
Total 40.0 100.0 56.7 4.5 5.5 5.9 6.2 7.0 6.8
External
Multilateral creditors2,3 24.3
7.2 60.8
18.0 34.5
10.2 1.6
0.4 2.2
0.6 2.9
0.8 2.2
0.5 2.8
0.7 3.4
0.9
External 2,3
24.3 60.8 34.5 1.6 2.2 2.9 2.2 2.8 3.4
Multilateral
IMF creditors2,3 7.2
2.0 18.0
5.0 10.2
2.9 0.4 0.6 0.8 0.5 0.7 0.9
Multilateral creditors 7.2 18.0 10.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 0.5 0.7 0.9
IMF
World Bank 2.0
2.8 5.0
7.1 2.9
4.0
IMF 2.0 5.0 2.9
World
AfDB Bank 2.8
1.0 7.1
2.5 4.0
1.4
World Bank 2.8 7.1 4.0
AfDB
Other Multilaterals 1.0
1.3 2.5
3.4 1.4
1.9
AfDB 1.0 2.5 1.4
Other Multilaterals
o/w: IDB 1.3
0.7 3.4
1.7 1.9
1.0
Other Multilaterals 1.3 3.4 1.9
o/w: IDB
BOAD 0.7
0.4 1.7
0.9 1.0
0.5
o/w: IDB 0.7 1.7 1.0
o/w:Others
BOAD 0.4
0.3 0.9
0.8 0.5
0.4
o/w: BOAD 2
0.4 0.9 0.5
BilateralOthers
Creditors 0.3
4.1 0.8
10.2 0.4
5.8 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.3
Others 2
0.3 0.8 0.4
Bilateral Creditors
Paris Club 4.1
1.1 10.2
2.8 5.8
1.6 0.1
0.0 0.2
0.0 0.3
0.1 0.2
0.0 0.2
0.1 0.3
0.1
Bilateral Creditors2 4.1 10.2 5.8 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.3
Paris
o/w:Club
France 1.1
0.6 2.8
1.6 1.6
0.9 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.1
Paris Club 1.1 2.8 1.6 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.1
o/w: France
Germany 0.6
0.3 1.6
0.8 0.9
0.5
o/w: France 0.6 1.6 0.9
o/w:Others
Germany 0.3
0.2 0.8
0.5 0.5
0.3
o/w: Germany 0.3 0.8 0.5
Others
Non-Paris Club 0.2
2.9 0.5
7.4 0.3
4.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
Others 0.2 0.5 0.3
Non-Paris
o/w: China Club 2.9
2.7 7.4
6.8 4.2
3.9 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
Non-Paris Club 2.9 7.4 4.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
o/w: China
India 2.7
0.2 6.8
0.4 3.9
0.2
o/w: China 2.7 6.8 3.9
o/w:Others
India 0.2
0.1 0.4
0.1 0.2
0.1
o/w: India 0.2 0.4 0.2
Bonds Others 0.1
8.5 0.1
21.4 0.1
12.1 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.7 0.8
Others 0.1 0.1 0.1
Bonds
Commercial creditors 8.5
4.5 21.4
11.3 12.1
6.4 0.5 0.6
0.9 0.7
1.2 0.8
0.7 0.7
1.1 0.8
1.4
Bonds 8.5 21.4 12.1 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.7 0.8
o/w: MUFG
Commercial creditors 4.5
0.6 11.3
1.5 6.4
0.9 0.5 0.9 1.2 0.7 1.1 1.4
Commercial creditors 4.5 11.3 6.4 0.5 0.9 1.2 0.7 1.1 1.4
o/w: MUFG
SGF 0.6 1.5 0.9
0.8
o/w: MUFG 0.6 1.5 0.9
o/w:Others
SGF 0.6
3.3 1.5
8.3 0.8
4.7
o/w: SGF 0.6 1.5 0.8
Domestic Others 3.3
15.7 8.3
39.2 4.7
22.2 2.9 3.3 3.0 4.0 4.2 3.4
Others 3.3 8.3 4.7
Domestic
Held by residents, total 15.7
n/a 39.2
n/a 22.2
n/a 2.9 3.3 3.0 4.0 4.2 3.4
Domestic 15.7 39.2 22.2 2.9 3.3 3.0 4.0 4.2 3.4
Held by residents, total total
non-residents, n/a n/a n/a
Held by residents, total n/a n/a n/a
Held
T-Billsby non-residents, total n/a
0.4 n/a
1.0 n/a
0.6 0.6 0.4 0.0 0.8 0.5 0.0
Held by non-residents, total n/a n/a n/a
T-Bills
Bonds 0.4
3.9 1.0
9.8 0.6
5.6 0.6
0.9 0.4
1.1 0.0
1.0 0.8
1.3 0.5
1.4 0.0
1.1
T-Bills 0.4 1.0 0.6 0.6 0.4 0.0 0.8 0.5 0.0
Bonds
Loans, and others 3.9
11.4 9.8
28.4 5.6
16.1 0.9
1.4 1.1
1.8 1.0
2.0 1.3
1.9 1.4
2.3 1.1
2.3
Bonds 3.9 9.8 5.6 0.9 1.1 1.0 1.3 1.4 1.1
Loans,
Memo and others
Items: 11.4 28.4 16.1 1.4 1.8 2.0 1.9 2.3 2.3
Loans, and others4 11.4 28.4 16.1 1.4 1.8 2.0 1.9 2.3 2.3
Memo Items: debt
Collateralized n/a n/a n/a
Memo Items: 4 5
Collateralized debt
Contingent liabilities n/a n/a n/a
Collateralized debt4 5 n/a n/a n/a
Contingent
Nominal GDP liabilities n/a
70.2 n/a n/a
Contingent liabilities5 n/a n/a n/a
Nominal GDP 70.2
Nominal GDP 70.2
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff calculations.
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff calculations.
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff calculations.
1/As reported by Country authorities according to their classification of creditors, including by official and commercial. Debt coverage is the same as the DSA, exce pt for
guaranteed
1/As reported debt.
by Country authorities according to their classification of creditors, including by official and commercial. Debt coverage is the same as the DSA, exce pt for
1/As reported by Country authorities according to their classification of creditors, including by official and commercial. Debt coverage is the same as the DSA, exce pt for
guaranteed
2/Some debt.
public debt is not shown in the table due to limited availability of information. This includes non-guaranteed SOE debt and local government debt.
guaranteed debt.
3/Multilateral
2/Some publiccreditors”
debt is not areshown
simplyininstitutions withtomore
the table due than
limited one official
availability shareholder and
of information. Thismay not necessarily
includes non-guaranteed align with
SOE creditor
debt andclassification under other
local government debt. IMF policies
2/Some public debt is not shown in the table due to limited availability of information. This includes non-guaranteed SOE debt and local government debt.
(e.g. Lending Into
3/Multilateral Arrears).
creditors” are simply institutions with more than one official shareholder and may not necessarily align with creditor classification under other IMF policies
3/Multilateral creditors” are simply institutions with more than one official shareholder and may not necessarily align with creditor classification under other IMF policies
(e.g.
4/Debt Lending Into Arrears).
is collateralized when the creditor has rights over an asset or revenue stream that would allow it, if the borrower defaults on its payment obligations, to rely on
(e.g. Lending Into Arrears).
the asset
4/Debt is or revenue stream
collateralized whentothe secure repayment
creditor of over
has rights the debt. Collateralization
an asset entailsthat
or revenue stream a borrower granting
would allow liensborrower
it, if the over specific existing
defaults on itsassets or future
payment receivables
obligations, to on
to rely a
4/Debt is collateralized when the creditor has rights over an asset or revenue stream that would allow it, if the borrower defaults on its payment obligations, to rely on
lender
the assetas or
security
revenue against
stream repayment
to secureofrepayment
the loan. Collateral
of the debt.is “unrelated” whenentails
Collateralization it has no relationship
a borrower to a project
granting financed
liens over byexisting
specific the loan. An example
assets or futurewould be borrowing
receivables to a
the asset or revenue stream to secure repayment of the debt. Collateralization entails a borrower granting liens over specific existing assets or future receivables to a
to finance
lender the budget
as security deficit,
against collateralized
repayment of the by oil Collateral
loan. revenue receipts. See the
is “unrelated” jointitIMF-World
when Bank notetofor
has no relationship the G20financed
a project “Collateralized Transactions:
by the loan. Key would
An example Considerations for
be borrowing
lender as security against repayment of the loan. Collateral is “unrelated” when it has no relationship to a project financed by the loan. An example would be borrowing
Public Lenders
to finance and Borrowers”
the budget for a discussion
deficit, collateralized of revenue
by oil issues raised by collateral.
receipts. See the joint IMF-World Bank note for the G20 “Collateralized Transactions: Key Considerations for
to finance the budget deficit, collateralized by oil revenue receipts. See the joint IMF-World Bank note for the G20 “Collateralized Transactions: Key Considerations for
Public Lenders
5/Includes and Borrowers”
other-one for a discussion
off guarantees of issues
not included raisedguaranteed
in publicly by collateral.
debt (e.g. credit lines) and other explicit contingent liabilities not elsewhere classified (e.g.
Public Lenders and Borrowers” for a discussion of issues raised by collateral.
potential
5/Includeslegal claims, off
other-one payments resulting
guarantees from PPPinarrangements).
not included publicly guaranteed debt (e.g. credit lines) and other explicit contingent liabilities not elsewhere classified (e.g.
5/Includes other-one off guarantees not included in publicly guaranteed debt (e.g. credit lines) and other explicit contingent liabilities not elsewhere classified (e.g.
potential legal claims, payments resulting from PPP arrangements).
potential legal claims, payments resulting from PPP arrangements).
27
and 0.8°C between 1970 and 2021 (5-year
26.8
running mean).1 Rain patterns have shifted as 26.6
26
rainless periods in the wet season. Different 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 2019
studies from the British Met Office, the Source: World Bank and IMF staff calculations
1/ Last 30 years refers to the 30 years prior, and including, a data point.
2. The Ivorian economy is vulnerable to climate change mostly through its impact on
agriculture. The sector employs about half of the workforce and contributes about 17 percent of
GDP and 10 percent of tax revenues. Côte d’Ivoire is the world’s largest producer and exporter of
cocoa accounting for 40 percent of global cocoa exports. Cocoa alone represents 30 percent of the
country’s export revenue and provides income to about one-fifth of its population. Despite its
importance for the Ivorian economy, only 0.2 percent of the country’s cropland is under irrigation,
making it vulnerable to adverse weather and climate change. Agricultural productivity is already
severely impacted by climate change, with a 35 percent slowdown of its growth since 1960s—
compared to a counterfactual without climate change.3 The World Bank estimates that the land
suitable for cocoa production will also shrink by around half by 2050. The country also exports
substantial quantity of cashew nuts, cotton and bananas. Other major crops in Côte d’Ivoire include
coffee, maize, oil palm fruit, plantains, rice, sugar cane and yams. The World Bank CCDR estimates
1 The average 5-year temperature went from 26.29°C in 1970 to 27.22°C in 2021, or an increase of 0.93°C. Taking
into account only yearly temperatures, which is more likely to present outliers, the increase in this period is 0.70°C.
2As average annual temperatures increase, the frequency of extremely hot days (with daily maximum temperatures
exceeding 35°C) is expected to rise significantly, especially in northern Côte d'Ivoire. Within the SSP2-4.5 scenario
(moderate emissions reduction), it is projected that by 2030, there could be an additional 20 very hot days per year
compared to 2000. This number is anticipated to grow to 30 by 2050 and a substantial 60 more by 2080.
3
Ortiz-Bobea, A., Ault, T., Carillo, C., Chambers, R., Lobell, D. (2021) Anthropogenic climate change has slowed global
agricultural productivity growth. Nature Climate Change. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-021-01000-1 cited
in IPCC AR6 WG2 Chapter 9.
most of these crops will be affected by higher temperatures with up to 20-30 percent decline in
production in the most pessimistic scenario. It is important to note that even heat-resistant crops
such as cotton, will likely to be negatively affected because of the water cycle disruption. For
example, in 2023 January cotton production—which is the third largest agricultural export, after
cocoa and cashew—almost halved in Côte d’Ivoire (compared to the previous season), because of
droughts that led to widespread pests—a damage equivalent of US$60 million.4 While it is difficult
to estimate the number of cotton farmers, as most farmers grow multiple crops, the authorities
estimate it to be around one million.
Change in Cacao
Change Production Suitability
in Cacao Suitability 2013-50 2013-50
Sources: IMFIMF
Sources: withwith
data from
data Laderach,
from P., Martinez-Valle,
Laderach, A., Schroth,
P., Martinez-Valle, G., Castro,
A., Schroth, N.. (2013)
G., Castro, N.
(2013).
Note: The pink line delineates the suitable area as of 2013. The map illustrates the changes in
cocoa farming suitability due to climate changes from 2013 to 2050.
3. Climate change also poses risk to water security, which affects agriculture and
other sectors. While Côte d’Ivoire has sufficient water resources, they are unevenly distributed
across the country, with southern parts being well-watered and northern regions often
experiencing water shortages. For example, Bouaké, the second largest city in Côte d’Ivoire,
experienced a water shortage in 2018, which left 1.5 million people without access to drinking
water.5 With changing precipitation patterns and a decreasing trend in total precipitation,
4Portail Officiel du Gouvernement de Côte d’Ivoire. Soutien à la filière coton: 34,52 milliards de FCFA de subvention
de l’ Etat aux cotonculteurs pour la campagne 2022-2023 (02/03/2023). https://www.gouv.ci/_actualite-
article.php?recordID=14675.
5 Claon et al (2020) Water Scarcity in African Cities: Anthropic factor or Climate Change? Case of Bouaké
(Côte d’Ivoire). https://en.unesco.org/sites/default/files/claon_0.pdf.
competition for water resources will likely increase. The main user of water is agriculture, with
about half of the total water consumption in the country.
4. Disruption of the water cycle has also led to increased floodings. Floods have been the
most frequent disasters in Côte d’Ivoire. According to the World Bank,6 the annual cost of coastal
floods is around 4 percent of GDP, which will likely be exacerbated by sea-level rise. Such disasters
affect tourism (about 5-7 percent of GDP), and can lead to saltwater intrusion, which negatively
affects water supplies. The frequency of floods is increasing according to EM-DAT. Notwithstanding
EM-DAT’s shortcomings, it is worth noting that while between 1990 and 2000, only one flood is
recorded, the following decade the number of floods jumped to four, and between 2010 and 2020
it increased further to eight. The total annual losses from fluvial and flash floods are estimated to be
around 0.11 percent of GDP, according to the UNDRR. Most of the loss from these types of floods is
concentrated in the southern regions some of which experience US$20 million direct economic loss
annually, in addition to the mortality and displacement effects. For example, in the Adzopé
department, each year about 5 percent of population is impacted by floods.
5. Climate change will likely place additional burden on Côte d’Ivoire, by contributing to the
spread of diseases and exacerbating conflicts. The World Bank CCDR estimates that both vector-
borne (malaria, dengue) and water-born (diarrheal) disease could increase. While the projections for
vector-borne diseases are uncertain—and in some scenarios even decreasing with climate change,
water-borne disease outbreaks and spread are likely to increase. In addition, many may be displaced by
the effects of climate change (for example, by the decreasing agricultural yields), and competition for
scarce resources (land, water or food) will increase, potentially leading to new conflicts.
6. Women are more vulnerable to climate hazards. Women are more likely to be employed in
sectors vulnerable to climate change. They also have twice higher rate of illiteracy when compared to
men, limited access to information, productive inputs, and collateral, with only 8 percent of women
holding a land title or certificate of sale, compared to
22 percent of men.7 This limits their ability to protect Forest Area
(% change per decade)
their crops or adapt to climate hazards. Cote d'Ivoire Guinea Nigeria Ghana Senegal Sub-Saharan Africa
0.05
-0.1
intensive agricultural production practices, the country
-0.15
has experienced severe loss of forest from 37 percent -0.2
-0.35
While forests typically capture carbon, deforestation 1991-2000 2001-2010 2011-2020
reduces that effect. It also increases vulnerability to Sources: World Bank and IMF Staff calculations.
6Croitoru, L., Miranda, J., Sarraf, M. (2019) The Cost of Coastal Zone Degradation in West Africa: Benin, Côte d’Ivoire,
Senegal and Togo https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/822421552504665834/pdf/The-Cost-of-Coastal-
Zone-Degradation-in-West-Africa-Benin-Côte-dIvoire-Senegal-and-Togo.pdf.
7
World Bank CCDR.
climate change by amplifying temperature increase, decreasing the likelihood of rainfall, and
degrading land, thereby increasing the risk of floods and landslides.
8. While greenhouse gas emissions are low, they are growing rapidly in several sectors.
Côte d’Ivoire’s emissions per capita stood at 2 tonnes of CO2 equivalent (or tCO2e), well below the sub-
Saharan African average of 3.2 tCO2e, thanks the country’s reliance on hydro- and natural gas power.
More than 60 percent of emissions comes from Agriculture and Land-Use Change and Forestry with
agriculture being the largest contributor to both methane and nitrous oxide emissions. Emissions from
these sectors have remained stagnant over the past decades. The energy sector, especially from
transport and electricity generation, is the second largest source of emissions and is growing rapidly as
the economy develops. Emissions from electricity generation grew 40 percent in the last ten years—
driven by electrification, with per capita levels increasing more modestly at 10 percent. Emissions from
the transport sector have tripled, with per capita level of tCO2e emissions more than doubling between
2010 and 2020. In addition to the global public good of reduced carbon emissions, this would also help
address health effects of air pollution, which is the second most serious health risk factor in
Côte d’Ivoire, after malnutrition, according to the 2019 Global Burden of Disease. As the country is
expected to continue to grow rapidly, while continuing electrification of its economy, it is expected that
emissions will also increase steeply in the coming years. However, low current emissions, low energy
intensity of the economy and its renewable energy potential place Côte d’Ivoire in a good position to
avoid carbon lock-in (i.e., inertia in the use of high emission infrastructure assets), including by
implementing policies that discourage carbon-intensive technologies, encourage the efficient use of
energy, and provide an enabling environment for renewables to grow even further in importance.
Sources of GHG emissions (2020) Emissions from Electricity/Heat and Transportation Sectors
(Million Tonnes of CO2 equivalent) (Million Tonnes of CO2 equivalent)
6.78 6.6 5
Electricity/Heat Transportation
4.5
Agriculture 4
3.5
Energy 3
2.5
13.51
Land-Use Change and 2
Forestry 1.5
Other 1
0.5
26.06
0
1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020
9. The authorities revised the NDC in 2022 and made strong commitments to pursue
mitigation policies. Côte d’Ivoire is also signatory country of the Paris Climate Agreement, and the
NDC pledges net zero emission by 2030, in part conditional on international support. The
Government has also adopted the minutes of Côte d'Ivoire's participation at COP28 on climate
change. Côte d'Ivoire's new, unconditional commitment is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by
10. The NDC also addresses exposure and vulnerability to climate change through
adaptation. The NDC emphasizes the importance of increasing resilience in agriculture, as well as
the need to strengthen the protection and restoration of forests. In addition, NDC seeks to improve
water resource governance through integrated water resources management, addressing health
challenges by building capacity and increasing health surveillance, and increasing the resilience of
coastal zones.
11. Implementing NDC commitments bears significant costs. The implementation cost of
climate policies is estimated at US$22 billion (US$12 billion in adaption and US$10 billion in
mitigation). Private financing is expected to play a major role in financing, as well as international
sources such as the Green Climate Fund and the Adaptation Fund.
12. Risks from climate change are also addressed in several national plans. The latest NDP
2021-2025 states as one of its five pillars, the management of the environment, forest and wildlife
resources and the fight against climate change. As part of this pillar, the authorities are preparing a
National Adaptation Plan with five priority sectors as identified in the NDC: agriculture, land use,
water resources, coastal zones, and health. A National Disaster Risk Reduction Strategy was revised
for 2020-2030, and the National Platform for Risk Reduction and Disaster Management created in
2011, though implementation has remained lackluster. Climate changes issues are also covered in
key sectoral strategies, including agriculture, mining, transport, water management, energy, and
forestry, although capacity, resource, or coordination constraints have hampered implementation.
More comprehensive, integrated, and effective plans will need to involve stakeholders at the
national and local levels.
13. While legal frameworks are in place in many key sectors, systematically addressing
climate change issue is often missing, sometimes by lack of clear policy or capacity. The country
currently does not have a comprehensive climate change legal and regulatory framework in line
with its adaption and decarbonization objectives, though there is a climate change law in the
drafting phase. The current absence of an umbrella and multi-sectoral climate change law makes
setting priorities for climate policies vulnerable to political changes and undermines sustainable
climate change policy planning over several policy cycles. The authorities intend to pursue their
efforts on the legislative front by implementing the forestry code and updating the environmental
code. They also plan to develop a carbon credit market and an environmental tax system, including
carbon taxes, based on a national strategy.
14. Côte d’Ivoire is at the early stage of development of robust public investment
management (PIM) and PFM frameworks for integration of climate considerations. The
country recently adopted a new PIM legal framework with FAD support, which should provide a
good base to integrate climate considerations overtime. As noted in the C-PIMA/Green PFM TA
report, initiatives in the green PFM have been mostly linked to secure access to climate finance.
Agriculture, livestock, aquaculture (i) put in place protective measures against climate risks,
(ii) promote agricultural practices that protect soil fertility, and
(iii) support climate-smart agro-pastoral and fishery systems
Forests and land use (i) improve land governance, (ii) strengthen the protection of
forests and prevent land degradation, and (iii) restore
degraded lands and forests.
Coastal Zones (i) build capacity of technical and financial institutions for
integrated management of coastal zones, (ii) establish early
warning systems, and (iii) support vulnerable communities
through physical and social investments.
Priority Mitigation Actions
Agriculture (i) ensure self-sufficiency and food security, and (ii) improve
agriculture productivity and competitiveness
15. Despite recent advances, climate mitigation policy faces governance constraints.
Climate policy is under the purview of the Environment Ministry, which is budgeted in a different
way from other ministries. Specifically, the Environment Ministry is mainly financed by an off-
budget system which is based on environmental taxes. Small projects and perverse incentives
encourage multiple, low level environmental taxes, which are sometimes in contradiction with each
other. For example, there are multiple vehicle taxes with separate administrative procedures, which
neutralize each other in terms of their potential impact on reducing GHG emissions.
C. Development Partners
16. Côte d’Ivoire has worked closely with development partners on climate related issues.
Key stakeholders, including the IMF, have recently created a coordination group to enhance
collaboration and foster synergies. As the country stepped up its green agenda and reforms’
program, so did the development partners and NGOs, both by providing more climate-related
financing and TA. Figure 1 shows the general trends of official climate-related development finance.
After being dominated by mitigation financing in the earlier years, adaptation financing has
increased steadily. A shift can also be observed in the type of creditors where multilateral creditors
were dominating until 2020, until bilateral financing has picked up in Côte d’Ivoire, while the
majority of financing is based on debt. More than half of the projects are in the energy, and
transport and storage, and agriculture sectors.
1,200,000 1,200,000
1,000,000 1,000,000
800,000 800,000
600,000 600,000
400,000 400,000
200,000 200,000
0 0
2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 2018 2021 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 2018 2021
1,200,000
Transport &
1,000,000 Storage
800,000 Agriculture,
Forestry, Fishing
600,000
Other Multisector
400,000
9%
200,000 Government & 14%
Civil Society
0
2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 2018 2021 Others 12%
14%
Sources: OECD and IMF staff calculations.
17. Partners are heavily involved in agriculture, notably sustainable cocoa production.
European legislation requires that after end-2024 all cocoa-exporting countries to the EU should be
able to provide traceability on their goods to ensure the products’ origin and prevent further
deforestation. The EU has provided budget support and TA to smooth the process. The Adaptation
Fund is also active in climate smart agriculture, such as improved water management technologies
and options to diversify crops, and the ADF and the World Bank works on the securitization of rural
land and reforestation efforts. The World Bank is also supporting the operationalization of the
traceability system and key legislative reforms through budget support. On the financial resilience
side, the Adaptation Fund is working to provide access to green finance for farmers, while the West
African Development Bank will provide temporary funding to partially subsidize premia for an
agricultural insurance scheme for cotton. Relatedly, the government also developed the Abidjan
Legacy Programme, a multi-partner initiative launched at UNCCD COP15 to combat desertification
in May 2022 to address the challenges of land use. It focuses on identifying risk profiles for key
commodity value chains (especially cash crops) and supporting the sustainable transition of these
value chains.
18. A number of World Bank programs focus on the critical need for improved
management of water resources. Specifically, the World Bank is implementing a 17-year long
program in three phases, currently in its second phase, aimed at operationalizing integrated water
management. The program started in 2011, with the first phase aiming to restore basic
infrastructure service delivery following the civil war. The second phase started in 2016 and focused
on improved water supply and hygiene, while conducting strategic studies on the implementation
integrated water resource management. The third phase will start in 2024 and seeks to provide
investment and support reforms that are focused on integrated water resource management. This
includes partnerships with various stakeholders, and detailed master plans including for reforming
institutions as well as expanding infrastructure in the future.
19. Côte d’Ivoire is working with partners on early warning systems for floods. The World
Meteorological Organization has operational pilots in a few departments of the country, including
the Volta Basin. In Abidjan, the World Bank has implemented an early warning system for floods
with plans for extension to other cities. These interventions include technical support, capacity
building, and investments in equipment.
20. Green finance has generated strong interest to attract the private sector’s
involvement. The UNDP helped Côte d’Ivoire develop an ESG framework in 2021, and the World
Bank is currently supporting a strengthening of their framework. The AfDB 2023 country report
focused on green finance and the AfDB provided a partial guarantee for a ESG loan in July 2023.
21. Many partners have supported mitigation and decarbonization efforts. The World Bank
and EU are helping the country develop carbon credit system starting with a registry. The World
Bank provided extensive reports on environmental taxation and more specifically on the ‘parafiscal’
system of environmental taxes and funds, while the UNDP also provided TA on carbon taxation and
carbon credits. Côte d’Ivoire became one of the first countries in the region to benefit from climate
finance through the Emission Reduction Program (REDD+) as it succeeded in reducing emissions
from deforestation and forest degradation around the Tai National Park. Development partners are
also involved in developing renewable energy sources and promoting greener transportation, such
as KFW financing a solar power project in the north of the country and AFD supporting electric
mobility by the construction of the Abidjan metro.
22. To fight climate related issues, the World Bank committed to mobilize more than
US$4.2 billion by 2025, of which US$1.7 billion in new projects and budget support. The
World Bank is developing projects in diverse areas such as agriculture including cashew value chain
sustainability, inclusive connectivity and climate resilient community infrastructure (i.e., roads,
schools, markets and electrification), electricity and renewable energy, rural land tenure
management, water security and sanitation, and financial inclusion for green and resilient housing.
The World Bank Country Partnership Framework (FY23-FY27) places climate-related issues and
combating fragility at the core of the institutions’ engagement in the next 5 years.
23. Raising adequate financing to build resilience is a major challenge. The Ivorian
authorities would need to develop a full green finance strategy to cover financing estimated at
US$22 billion. Given limitations in the domestic financing system, all sources of financing would
need to be considered, traditional donors but also international climate funds, which could unlock
significant private financing, as well as different types of financing. The authorities have already
used blended financing through regional bank provided guarantees. The strategy should include
sustainability-linked bonds to be able to fully leverage private sector participation. As mentioned
earlier, private investment should play a major role, as it is assumed to cover 74 percent of the NDP.
Reform measures to address financing will thus likely play an important role to maximize the
catalytic impact of Fund financial support through the RSF.
24. While the government already subscribed to some insurance against drought, it needs
to develop a full strategy to build resilience again disasters. The authorities should reduce
vulnerability, for example through an end-to-end early warning system by strengthening disaster
risk management policies. For disaster risks against which resilience building is insufficient, Ivorian
authorities should explore disaster risk financing options and develop a disaster risk financing
strategy. The authorities purchased drought insurance with the help of UNDP from the African Risk
Capacity (ARC) since the 2019/20 season but there are opportunities for other instruments. They
should also build adequate financial protection instruments, such as sovereign catastrophe
insurance, contingent credit liens and disaster funds. They could develop a strategy based on the
World Bank’s risk layering approach and implement sovereign disaster risk financing instruments.
25. To be able to match green financing needs, the government needs to develop a full
green public financial management system. The authorities should adopt a climate-informed
procurement system that stands along the PFM chain. The PFM organic law, the code of
transparency and good governance, the citizen budget, and other texts should provide for the
integration of climate change policy objectives in public finance and investment management tools,
to move toward green public procurement. For PFM and the introduction of climate-sensitive
budgeting (CSB), the first step would be to introduce a climate budget tagging limited to
investment expenditures. This approach could in time be extended to other types of expenditure
and usher in a published budget document showing in a transparent manner how the government
uses the budget to foster its ambitions in the field of climate change.
26. The PPP legal framework should also be enhanced to create incentives for greater
private sector participation in climate resilient-infrastructure projects. Reforms should aim at
allowing risk-sharing on investments in new technologies, innovative business practices, and
climate-smart performance-based contracts. Key regulatory and legal reforms are needed to
increase private equity and venture capital (PE/VC) for green technologies. A comprehensive
framework should include clear guidelines for licensing conditions, supervision of fund
functionaries, and a revised tax regime conforming to global standards. These regulations,
combined with an investor-friendly environment and streamlined processes, will attract capital,
drive the growth of the PE/VC industry, and facilitate financing flows to green projects. RM3 should
strengthen PPP framework by enhancing evaluation and selection of investments ‘projects.
Additionally, several donors such as the AFDB and United Nations Economic Commission for Africa
are also involved.
27. Integrating climate considerations into PIM framework implies the modification the
institutional framework and tools. The main reforms aim at integrating climate change in the
appraisal and selection of public investment projects. This will require the adoption of a standard
methodology to improve consideration of climate issues in the ex-ante environmental impact
studies, and formalization of project selection criteria including climate change (exposition to
climate change risk, impact in terms of climate change adaptation and/or mitigation). Another
reform is about integrating climate-related vulnerabilities linked to the localization and design of
public assets into maintenance and asset management policies.
28. Climate-related PIM reform could enhance the resilience of infrastructure and,
ultimately, the economy. To assess the macro-fiscal implications of strengthening resilience to
climate change, several Debt, Investment, Growth, and Natural Disaster (DIGNAD) model scenarios
were run. The DIGNAD model is a dynamic general equilibrium (DGE) model designed to study the
effects of public investment on economic growth and debt sustainability in a context of a natural
disaster. Through its simulations, the model presents macro-fiscal outcomes associated with public
adaptation investment, economic growth, and debt, relative to those at steady state. In the model,
natural disasters are expected to affect the economy through five channels: (i) damages to public
capital, (ii) damages to private capital, (iii) a temporary productivity loss, (iv) a decline in public
investment efficiency, and (v) a loss in credit worthiness.
-1 64
-2 62
60
-3
58
-4
56
-5
54
-6 52
-7 50
54
53
52
51
50
49
48
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
2037
2038
2039
2040
29. Côte d’Ivoire is set to significantly benefit from investments in resilience to climate
change. The macro-variables are calibrated to reflect the Ivorian economy’s averages from the last
5 years, where possible. When Côte d’Ivoire’s data were unavailable, regional averages were
imputed for parameters. The disaster is assumed to be a coastal flood causing 9 percent GDP loss,
which is a severe flood based on the 2019 World Bank report on coastal zone degradation in
West Africa. The fiscal gap caused by the disaster is assumed to be filled by debt financing.
Figure 2 shows the GDP and public debt effects of the disaster for two scenarios: (1) the authorities
invest in cheaper, non-resilient infrastructure in the years before the disaster, and (2) the authorities
invest in more expensive, resilient infrastructure. Not only is the GDP drop less pronounced for
resilient infrastructure, but it also recovers more quickly compared to the non-resilient
infrastructure investment. Similarly, while the flood raises public debt in both types of investment,
with resilient infrastructure the effect is more muted with about 10 percentage points of GDP
increase, compared to 16 percentage points of non-resilient infrastructure investment.
30. Steadfast progress in domestic revenue mobilization would attenuate the negative
effect of natural disasters on debt sustainability. A different scenario assumes the same
parameters for the Ivorian economy and the same effect of coastal floods, but instead infrastructure
investment and recovery are financed by domestic revenue mobilization. As before, the resilient
infrastructure makes the effect of natural disaster more muted both for GDP and for total public debt.
However, revenue financing makes the effect on public debt much more muted in the short and long
term, as revenues are used to finance the gap, with about 4 percentage point of GDP short term
increase for the non-resilient infrastructure, and half of that for the resilient infrastructure.
31. The authorities’ intention to develop a national strategy of carbon taxation offers an
opportunity to systematically improve the mitigation efforts in Côte d’Ivoire. Existing
institutional structures and the ‘parafiscal’ system of environmental taxes are suboptimal to incentivize
mitigation. An economy-wide perspective on carbon taxation would consistently provide incentives
for decarbonization. It also enables lowering other, distortionary taxes, such VAT or labor income tax,
the so-called double dividend. A comprehensive carbon tax may simultaneously contribute towards
environmental and economic goals. In countries with a large informal sector, such a tax is best applied
at chokepoints where fossil fuels enter in the economy. The Fund recommends an international
carbon price floor of US$50 per tonne for middle-income countries, such as Côte d’Ivoire, in addition
to the existing taxes and excises. While based on preliminary analysis the current implicit tax on
carbon—the fuel excises for oil products weighted by their carbon content—is estimated at about
US$91 per tonne on average for 2023, Côte d’Ivoire’s fuel price stabilization mechanism has implied
significant implicit carbon subsidization when global oil prices were high in the past (such as a
US$35 per tonne subsidy in 2022). Reform of the fuel price mechanism would aim to reconcile the
need to avoid carbon subsidization by ensuring a minimum carbon tax with the need to protect the
economy from disruptive fuel price swings due to global market volatility.
32. Modelling shows that levying a carbon tax could lead to substantial benefits.
Assessment of a carbon tax is done with the IMF-World Bank Carbon Policy Assessment Tool (CPAT).
The CPAT is a spreadsheet-based model that allows the evaluation of a number of climate change
mitigation measures across countries. For the modelling exercise staff uses data from Côte d’Ivoire,
whenever possible—the carbon tax is assumed in addition to existing taxes and excises and is set at
US$5 per tonne initially and gradually increase to US$50 per tonne by 2030. The model allows for
multiple ways to use the tax revenue. For instance, in this illustrative exercise, the tax revenue is
assumed to be used for a combination of increasing investment in infrastructure and lump-sum
transfer to protect the most vulnerable and lowering taxes on personal income relative to the
baseline. Figure 3 shows that a US$50 carbon taxation would lower the greenhouse gas emissions by
about 15 percent in 2035, and would be sufficient for Côte d’Ivoire to fulfill its ambitious NDC.
33. Despite the large effect on emissions, the carbon tax would have only a small impact on
the economy (Figure 3). At its peak, the carbon tax (with revenue recycling to lower taxes, increase
investment and lump-sum transfers), would have an impact of about 0.04 percentage points decrease
compared to a baseline annual growth. The small impact on GDP growth holds true in a wide range of
different scenarios. The CPAT analysis also shows that carbon taxation would be progressive and
increase consumption of the poorest households by about 0.5-1 percent in 2025 (without revenue
recycling the tax would reduce consumption of about 0.2 percent across wealth deciles). If a higher
share of revenue is recycled to decrease corporate and labor income taxes, the progressive nature of
carbon tax dampens; while using more revenue to increase public investment and to lump-sum
transfers strengthens the progressive nature of the tax.8 In addition to contributing to public good of
climate change mitigation and advancing Côte d’Ivoire’s own climate agenda, a carbon tax would also
have co-benefits—as shown in Figure 3. Specifically, reduced car use would lead to fewer road
accidents and less local air pollution. According to the model a total about 10,000 deaths could be
averted by the carbon tax.
35 6.5%
30
6.0%
25
20 5.5%
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
2021 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033 2035
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
8
While recycling revenues to lower labor income taxes makes the tax less progressive, it is worth noting that the
model does not include possible long-run benefits, such as increased formality of the economy and broadening of
the tax base.
References
Claon et al (2020) Water Scarcity in African Cities: Anthropic factor or Climate Change? Case of
Bouaké (Côte d’Ivoire). https://en.unesco.org/sites/default/files/claon_0.pdf
Croitoru, L., Miranda, J., Sarraf, M. (2019) The Cost of Coastal Zone Degradation in West Africa:
Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal and Togo
https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/822421552504665834/pdf/The-Cost-of-Coastal-
Zone-Degradation-in-West-Africa-Benin-Côte-dIvoire-Senegal-and-Togo.pdf
Doherty, A., Amies, J., Higazi, A., Mayhew, L., Osborne, R., Griffith, H., and Buonomo, E. (2022)
Climate risk report for the West Africa region. Met Office, ODI, FCDO
IMF Climate change dashboard: Country Data | Climate Change Indicators Dashboard (imf.org).
Ortiz-Bobea, A., Ault, T., Carillo, C., Chambers, R., Lobell, D. (2021) Anthropogenic climate change
has slowed global agricultural productivity growth. Nature Climate Change.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-021-01000-1 cited in IPCC AR6 WG2 Chapter 9.
Portail Officiel du Gouvernement de Côte d’Ivoire. Soutien à la filière coton: 34,52 milliards de FCFA
de subvention de l’ Etat aux cotonculteurs pour la campagne 2022-2023 (02/03/2023).
https://www.gouv.ci/_actualite-article.php?recordID=14675
République de Côte d’Ivoire, March 2022, Contributions Déterminées au niveau National (CDN) de
la Côte d’Ivoire.
The Abidjan Legacy Programme, May 2022: UN convention to combat desertification, COP15,
Abidjan 2022.
Timilsina, Dissou, Tomand and Heine (2021) Carbon Tax in an Economy with Informality: A
Computable General Equilibrium Analysis for Côte d’Ivoire. World Bank Development Research
Group. https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-
reports/documentdetail/795411624476995767/carbon-tax-in-an-economy-with-informality-a-
computable-general-equilibrium-analysis-for-Côte-d-ivoire
World Bank Group, 2021, 2021-2030 République de Côte d’Ivoire, Sustaining High, Inclusive, and
Resilient Growth Post COVID-19.
World Bank Group, Lelia Croitoru, Juan José Miranda and Maria Sarraf, March 2019, The cost of
coastal zone degradation in west Africa: Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, and Togo.
March 1, 2024
Re: Letter of Intent for the Resilience and Sustainability Facility Arrangement
1. The Ivorian economy has sustained its buoyancy in 2023, with a growth rate
estimated at 7.0 percent, in spite of difficult international economic circumstances, marked in
particular by the tightening of financing conditions and inflationary pressures. Execution of
the 2021-2025 National Development Plan (PND), coupled with the pursuit of far-reaching
structural reforms, has contributed to ensuring the resilience of the macroeconomic framework.
Inflation was kept at 4.4 percent at end-December 2023, as against 5.2 percent in 2022. The budget
deficit is expected to be consolidated in 2025. The current account deficit was held to 5.8 percent in
2023, thanks to an upturn in the trade surplus. Debt distress risks continue to be moderate. Despite
the uncertainties with respect to the changing global and regional situation, the country’s outlook
remains favorable.
2. The government is conscious of the fact that Côte d’Ivoire ranks among the countries
most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Thus, in May 2022 it carried out a review of
its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC). These NDCs, with a financing cost that comes to
22 billion dollars, envisage a reduction of greenhouse gas emissions (mitigation) by 30.41 percent
in 2030, as against 28.25 percent previously, and growth of resilience in the key sectors deemed to
be highly vulnerable to climate change (adaptation). The NDC thus contain significant adaptation
measures in the areas of transportation, agriculture and livestock, forestry, water resources, coastal
areas, and human health.
3. Within this context, Côte d’Ivoire requests a 30-month arrangement under the
Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) in the amount of SDR 975.6 million (or 150 percent
of the quota share, equivalent to around US$1.3 billion). This instrument will help the
government to implement policies and reforms required to sustain the prospective stability of its
balance of payments and to address the structural challenges over the longer term linked to the
economic consequences of climate change. The arrangement under the RSF will complement the
existing three-year arrangements under the ongoing ECF and EFF, approved by the IMF in May
2023 for a total amount of SDR 2601.6 million (400 percent of the quota share), one of the
objectives of which is to enhance resilience to climate change. It will thus make it possible to
address the issues of the policies, legislation, and establishment of the institutions and statistics
related to the emergence of a green economy, through the operationalization of various priority
reform measures and related actions.
5. The first pillar is designed to integrate climate issues into the process of public
financial and investment management. The second pillar pertains to the strengthening of
governance and climate policy coordination. The third pillar deals with increasing the climate
resilience of agriculture. The fourth pillar focuses on mobilizing green and sustainable financing for
private and state-owned enterprises. The fifth pillar in turn has to do with measures aimed at
limiting vulnerability to flooding and coastal erosion. Lastly, the sixth pillar relates to measures to
limit greenhouse gas emissions.
6. Throughout implementation of the reform measures under the RSF, the government
will carry on a close dialogue with the IMF, and will consult with it prior to any revision of the
reform measures contained in the MEFP, in accordance with the IMF’s consultation policies in
this regard. In addition, it will provide information to the IMF on the progress made in
implementing these measures and achieving their objectives. In the same way, within the
framework for dialogue mentioned above, the difficulties and other contingencies liable to disrupt
the process will be discussed with the IMF.
7. Lastly, the government gives its consent for publication of this letter of intent, the
MEFP supplement, and the IMF Staff Report on this program.
Sincerely yours,
_________________/s/________________
Adama Coulibaly
Minister of Finance and Budget
Attachment:
1. Supplement to the Memorandum on Economic and Financial Policies
CONTEXT
1. Côte d’Ivoire ranks among the fastest-growing countries worldwide, having since 2021
regained its pre-pandemic growth levels, recording average growth since then of close to 7 percent per
year, driven by the new National Development Plan for 2021-2025. Despite the successive exogenous
shocks of these last three years, Côte d’Ivoire is expected to maintain its dynamism, with an expected
growth of 7.0 percent on average over 2023-2025, well above the average rate of 3.8 percent expected in
sub-Saharan Africa.
2. Côte d’Ivoire – which also stands out due to the quality of its public financial management –
continues to maintain excellent relations with the whole of the multilateral and bilateral development
partners. As such, it will pursue its efforts with regard to revenue mobilization, so as to accelerate its path
toward fiscal consolidation, with an expected government deficit of 4.0 percent in 2024; it should reach the
WAEMU convergence threshold of 3.0 percent in 2025.
3. Firmly committed on the path to emergence, today Côte d’Ivoire is one of the most
attractive countries on the continent, thanks to strong political and institutional stability. The most
recent regional and municipal elections of September 2023 were held in a peaceful climate, bearing
witness to the progress achieved with respect to governance and institutional framework. These
achievements continue to be welcomed by international observers. Indeed, in recent years Côte d’Ivoire
has been registering continuous improvement in its scores on the leading international governance
indicators (World Governance Indicators, CPIA).
4. The recent first nine-year bond issue, which is ESG-labeled, reinforces Côte d’Ivoire’s
standing on the sustainable finance market. Indeed, this inaugural ESG issue draws on the ESG
Framework published by the country in July 2021 and updated in September 2023, as well as on the
technical assistance partnerships put in place with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and
the Global Center on Adaptation (GCA), aiming to strengthen the national mechanism for selection and
reporting of ESG projects.
5. Nevertheless, the authorities are aware that the economy of Côte d’Ivoire is exposed and
vulnerable to climate change, by virtue of the increase in temperature, of sea-level changes, and of the
rainfall pattern. The average temperature increased between 0.5° C and 0.8° C between 1970 and 2021.
Rainfall patterns have changed, as precipitation has become more frequent during the dry season while
there have been even greater periods without rain during the wet season. By the year 2050, Côte d’Ivoire
could face the combined effects of warmer average temperatures, an increased frequency of extremely
hot days, and a larger variability in precipitation. The increase in the sea level, as well as in the associated
risks of floods and coastal erosion, also remain major concerns. All else being equal, and with a pessimistic
climate scenario, climate change is expected to reduce the real gross domestic product (GDP) by as much
as 13 percent by the year 2050, and 1.63 million people would be prevented from escaping from poverty.
Adaptation measures are costly, but they could potentially offset a major part of the negative impact on
the climate, in particular on the poor.
6. In the National Development Plan for 2021-2025, the authorities have identified climate
change as a challenge. The Ivorian economy is vulnerable to climate change, primarily because of its
impact on agriculture. The sector employs around half of the workforce and contributes around 17 percent
of GDP and 10 percent of tax revenues. The productivity of the main cash crops has already been seriously
affected by climate change. Thus, the production of cotton, which is the third-largest agricultural export
following cocoa and cashew nuts, dropped by almost half as a result of the droughts that brought a
generalized spread of pests in their wake.
7. The authorities acknowledge the urgency of stepping up efforts for mitigation and
adaptation, in particular in the fields of agriculture, transportation, and infrastructure. Apart from its
direct effect on agriculture, climate change will also affect the availability of drinking water and
hydroelectric power generation, with negative impacts on the population, growth, and the stability of the
macroeconomic framework. The NDCs thus contain significant adaptation measures in the areas of
transportation, agriculture and livestock breeding, forestry, water resources, coastal areas, and health. They
include priority sectors for mitigation such as energy, waste, agriculture, and forestry. As for adaptation,
the actions and projects will continue to be implemented that are contained in the National Gender and
Climate Change Strategy, adopted in 2019, and the National Agricultural Investment Program 2 (PNIA,
2018-2025).
8. The government plans to strengthen its actions in combating climate change. Pursuant to its
climate strategy, built around the Paris Agreement, in May 2022 the government submitted its new
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). These envisage greenhouse gas emissions reduction
(mitigation) of 30.41 percent in 2030, compared to a previous figure of 28.25 percent, and growth in
resilience in five key sectors (forestry, agriculture, water resources, coastal areas, and health) that are highly
vulnerable to climate change (adaptation). In terms of mitigation, it will ensure rollout of the various
strategies developed. These include the National Strategy for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions from
Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+), the new Forestry Policy, and the National Strategy to
Reduce Short-Lived Climate Pollutants (SLCPs). In addition, with respect to the undertaking of activities of
production, processing, and distribution of oil and gas, the government will continue to ensure compliance
with the international environmental standards, and aims by the year 2030 to reduce fugitive methane
emissions arising from oil and gas, in accordance with the NDCs.
framework of COP15. The Abidjan Initiative seeks to create the conditions for environmental
sustainability, to replace the agricultural sector in its job creation role, and to produce a social equilibrium
guaranteeing the right to a healthy diet and a decent life. It is organized around four components:
(i) combating deforestation; (ii) restoration of no less than 20 percent of the forest cover by the end of the
decade; (iii) improvement in agricultural productivity and identification of the value chains of the future;
and (iv) sustainability of the current value chains. Within the context of its implementation, the government
has set up a Coordination Unit that will monitor in particular the National Plan to Combat Drought and the
land restoration projects. To do this, the government has adopted a 1.5 billion dollar investment plan over
the next five years, the financing of which requires the support of the technical and financial partners.
3. Implementation of these NDCs draws on (i) an investment and financing plan specifying costs; (ii) a partnership
plan that will highlight the key sectoral needs; (iii) a plan for monitoring/evaluation for optimal and efficient
implementation of the measures defined; and (iv) a communication strategy to publicize the results. Execution of these
projects requires major investments that call for enhanced cooperation between the Ivorian authorities, the private
sector, and the international financial institutions, including the new climate finance mechanisms such as the Green
Climate Fund (GCF) and the financial instruments of the multilateral development banks. In addition, Côte d’Ivoire
considers the putting in place of market and nonmarket mechanisms to be of the utmost importance.
Abidjan Legacy Program
4. Launched by the Ivorian Government on the sidelines of COP15, the Abidjan Legacy Program or Abidjan Initiative
is a program carried forward since 2022 by His Excellency the President of the Republic, designed to allow Côte
d’Ivoire to include approaches for sustainable land management and for restoration of highly degraded forest
ecosystems within its development strategies, in response to the challenges of drought and land restoration.
Taking Gender Issues into Account in Climate Action
5. To take gender-related issues into account in climate action, pursuant to the provisions of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Ministry of the Environment and Sustainable Development
(MINEDD) has undertaken initiatives for mobilization and engagement of the key stakeholders nationally, which
produced the preparation in 2019 of a National Gender and Climate Change Strategy (2020-2024). This dynamic is
reinforced by a memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed on October 25, 2021 between the Minister of the
Environment and Sustainable Development and the Minister of Women, the Family, and Children. This high-level
political commitment seeks to strengthen the process of advocacy for the systematic integration of the nexus of
gender and climate within sectoral planning and strategic and policy documents at national level.
6. Thus, this involves: (i) with regard to mitigation, analyzing gender-disaggregated responsibility in the mechanisms
of greenhouse gas emission and/or reduction; and (ii) with regard to adaptation, analyzing the gender-disaggregated
situation in connection with vulnerability risks and impact chains, so as to strengthen the gender dimension within the
National Plan for Adaptation.
Other Initiatives in the Three Key Sectors
• Energy: The Government of Côte d’Ivoire has taken several measures seeking to reach its target of 45 percent
renewable energy sources within its production capacity by the year 2030. The 2019 sectoral policy for
development of renewable energy sources and energy efficiency seeks to optimize energy consumption, enhance
energy efficiency, promote renewable electricity, and reduce emissions of greenhouse gases in the electricity
sector. The country has also revised its tax arrangements, with the aim of fostering investments in the renewable
energy sector, by means of the exemption of equipment and materials for power generation and distribution from
the value-added tax, customs duties, and import taxes. As well, it makes provision for setting a feed-in tariff (tarif de
rachat) for the renewable energy produced.
• Forestry: The government has developed an ambitious program with a view to reversing the trends in
deforestation and forest degradation, by adopting its Strategy for Forest Preservation, Rehabilitation, and Extension
(SPREF, 2018). The country intends to generate a transformative change in forest management, and increase forest
cover from 11 percent to 20 percent by the year 2040. A new Forestry Code was adopted in 2019, with the aim of
fostering and developing agroforestry, as well as of strengthening the existing natural forest protections.
Transportation: Côte d’Ivoire is undertaking sectoral studies that include assessment of a carbon tax for the
transportation sector, with the aim of tackling the increase in emissions. The country has adopted a series of decrees
aimed at reducing the average age of private and public vehicles and putting in place a more energy-efficient and less
polluting fleet. These decrees set limits on the age of used vehicles imported into Côte d’Ivoire, tax relief for green and
socially responsible productive investments, and the setting of maximum thresholds for air quality by type of vehicle.
11. In 2023 Côte d’Ivoire sustained its economic buoyancy, with a growth rate estimated
at 7.0 percent, in spite of difficult international economic circumstances, marked in particular by
the tightening of financing conditions and by inflationary pressures. Execution of the 2021–
2025 National Development Plan (PND), coupled with continued major structural reforms, have
contributed to ensuring the resilience of the macroeconomic framework. Inflation was
contained at 4.8 percent in 2023, following observed price inflation on average of 4.7 percent
over the 2021-2022 period. The budget deficit was to go from 6.8 percent of GDP in 2022 to
5.2 percent in 2023, in anticipation of fiscal consolidation in 2025. The current account deficit
was to be held to 5.8 percent in 2023, following 7.7 percent in 2022, thanks to an upturn in the
trade surplus. Overall and external risks of debt distress are expected to remain moderate.
12. The 40-month Economic and Financial Program entered into with the IMF in May
2023 is posting satisfactory performance in its implementation. The first review of the
program was completed on December 4, 2023, accompanied by a second disbursement under
the Enhanced Credit Facility (ECF), coupled with the Extended Fund Facility (EFF). According to
preliminary data, the end-December 2023 quantitative performance criteria have been met and
most of the indicative targets have been confirmed. The same applies to the structural
benchmarks, which have all been met.] In accordance with the program objectives, the
government will maintain its efforts to: (i) ensure the sustainability of public finance and debt,
through a gradual increase in the fiscal pressure, and budget deficit convergence in 2025 with
the WAEMU community standard of 3 percent; (ii) combat poverty and stimulate job creation
for young people; (iii) bring about change in Côte d’Ivoire’s growth paradigm, towards a model
based on the productivity of the private sector and vertical diversification; (iv) develop the
financial sector and deepen financial inclusion; and (v) improve climate change resilience by
creating increasingly green growth. The government is confident regarding the achievement of
the objectives of the economic program and implementation of the reforms, including adoption
of an overall Medium-Term Revenue Strategy (MTRS) by May 2024.
• To that end, the government plans to set up a national commission in charge of combating
climate change issues, under the auspices of the Prime Minister’s Office, with a mandate to
ensure compliance with the commitments made by Côte d’Ivoire at international level with
regard to combating climate change and taking climate challenges into account in sectoral
policies, and climate-sensitive economic planning and disaster risks management.
• Moreover, this commission will be responsible for producing an annual progress report
evaluating the status of climate transition in Côte d’Ivoire, which will include short - and
medium-term recommendations to the government to improve climate action and which
will be published. An official communication on the report will be presented in the Council
of Ministers (RM4).
• In addition, the government will adopt a draft climate change bill, encompassing the
creation of several entities, including: a National Climate Authority for strengthening of
coordination at national level of all of the actions for combating climate change; a
dedicated fund or other mechanism for mobilizing green finance; and a scientific watchdog
body for guidance for policy decisions. The commission referenced above under RM4 could
be included in this institutional framework.
15. In dealing with climate change, resilience of the agricultural sector is a key
objective. Given the vulnerability of agriculture to climate change, the government deems it
essential to foster adaptation of the agricultural sector. To do so, it envisages:
16. Consistent with the Abidjan Initiative, the government intends to roll out the
sustainable cocoa program, with a view to bringing Ivorian cocoa growing into line with
the new international requirements. The objectives and strategic pillars of the program are
fleshed out in Box 2 below with regard to combating climate change.
Mobilization of Green and Sustainable Financing for Private and Public Enterprises
17. The government plans to strengthen the management framework for climate
investments, in particular through the gradual implementation of its National Strategy for
Long-Term Climate Finance, which offers consistency and a strategic orientation to private and
public companies. It will also be coupled with the development of the architecture for climate-
related financial information and the adoption of a decree on the introduction of two
complementary frameworks, as well as the implementation timetable, namely: (i) a transition
taxonomy (reference framework for climate investments in the public and private sectors), covering
the needs of the country with regard to mitigation and adaptation in the key sectors; and
(ii) introduction of an interministerial coordination mechanism on the design of the taxonomy
(RM6).
18. In order to guide climate investments by the private sector, starting from the taxonomy
put in place within the framework of RM6, the government will adopt a decree that includes:
(i) introduction of a climate risk disclosure framework for the state-owned enterprises and the
private sector non-financial corporations connected to the taxonomy; and (ii) a disclosure
requirement integrated into the financial reporting of the state-owned enterprises and private non-
financial enterprises, based on climate risk disclosure framework, as well as their implementation
timeline (RM7).
19. In order to operationalize the green and sustainable finance platform, the government
will adopt a decree that comprises two actions: (i) operationalizing the green finance platform by
(1) setting up a website where domestic and international actors in climate finance will be able to
find the key information on the main pillars of the National Climate Finance Mobilization Strategy,
the Nationally Determined Contributions, the National Adaptation Plan, the National Development
Plan, the quantified targets for mobilization of domestic and international climate finance and the
role envisaged for the various financial instruments, and involvement of the multilateral donors and
other international partners in the National Climate Finance Mobilization Strategy; and (2) the
development and implementation of a plan for training and capacity-building for national actors on
climate finance instruments, taxonomies, and disclosure frameworks for climate risks; and
(ii) designing and implementing a framework for the monitoring and tracking of green financing,
through the system of Measurement, Reporting, and Verification (MRV) of finance for that said
platform (RM8).
20. In order to be protected from extreme weather events, such as floods or droughts,
which have already had an impact on agriculture, households, and the economy, the government
will implement the following reform measures, with partners’ TA:
• Strengthen the environmental and climate change component and deploy the multi-hazard
early warning system in Adzopé County (département). This early warning system will enable
rapid responses to and mitigation of the impact of disasters, over both the short and the long
terms. Prior to implementation at national level, the early warning system will be tested in a
pilot phase in Adzopé County. A report summarizing the first alerts will be produced in
December 2024 (RM9). The system will be deployed progressively at the national level.
• Design and adopt standardized maintenance methodologies for road infrastructures that take
into account the impact of climate change, and pilot their implementation in Greater Abidjan
(RM10). The road design manual to be drawn up will apply to existing roads (in the case of
rehabilitation work) and to new roads to be built.
21. Despite Côte d’Ivoire’s low level of emissions, the government is committed to
limiting their increase, so as to avoid mitigation costs in the future. It will do the following, with
partners’ TA, in order to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases:
i. Implement plans to operationalize the mandatory energy audit system for those entities with
annual energy consumption equal to or greater than a benchmark1 for the industrial, tertiary,
1
Industry: 1500 ton of oil equivalent (toe) or 2000 MWh; Tertiary and Transportation: 500 toe or 1000 MWh.
and transportation sectors in 2025, and complete the first five audits by end September 2025
and an energy labeling system for new air conditioners, refrigerators, and electric lamps in
December 2024 (RM11). These measures will contribute to decarbonization by identifying the
measures to be carried out by the enterprises subject to the mandatory energy audit, with the
aim of reducing their energy consumption and raising awareness among the population in
the choice of less energy-intensive equipment, consequently reducing greenhouse gas
emissions. These measures will be accompanied by an awareness-raising campaign. Based on
energy consumption in 2022, the audit system targets around 250 energy-intensive entities
the electricity consumption of which represents around 22 percent of national consumption,
which will have five years to implement the recommendations, with a return on investment
time of less than five years, failing which penalties will be applied.
ii. Continue to apply the existing fuel pricing mechanism, with an automatic adjustment to
smooth price volatility and preserve tax revenues. In addition, given that the mechanism
already includes an element of carbon taxation (Compliance with the Quality Standards CNQ),
the government undertakes to develop a strategy on carbon taxation tailored to the needs of
Côte d’Ivoire and in line with IMF technical assistance, and to make any necessary
adjustments to the fuel price in line with this strategy at the latest by end-December 2025
(RM12). This strategy will take into account the WAEMU Directives related to the taxation of
petroleum products. IMF staff TA will be requested for the preparation of this strategy,
including on the mechanism of adjustment of carbon taxes on fuel prices.
iii. Take a decree to promote electric mobility in Côte d’Ivoire. In order to help achieve the
10 percent target for electric vehicles in the vehicle fleet by the year 2030, as mentioned in
the NDCs, the government plans to take this decree on electric mobility by the end of April
2024. This decree will address issues such as the installation of electric charging stations,
technical inspection of electric vehicles, insurance for electric vehicles, and compliance with
the standards related to the battery charging stations (RM13).
iv. Within the framework of preparation of the carbon taxation strategy, the government will
examine the existing environmental tax system on combustion engine vehicles, and if
necessary, will adopt reforms to the taxation of these vehicles, in line with the objectives of
the NDCs. More specifically, the Government intends to put in place a legal framework that
ensures coherence between the different parts of the system, notably between the application
of registration fees, import duties, taxes, and other regulations relevant in terms of their
impact on the promotion of cleaner, more efficient cars (RM14).
v. Continue to integrate funding from the windows (guichets) of the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change, the Global Environment Facility (GEF), the Green Climate Fund
(GCF) and Adaptation Fund (AF), the environmental taxes and associated earmarked fees,
listed in MEFP Annex I, into the State budget, and align them to the NDCs where applicable
(RM15).
vi. Finalize the tendering process for the development, construction, and operation of solar
power plants to help achieve the NDC targets. In this context, the competitive procurement
process for the independent power producers selected as a result of the above-mentioned
tenders must be completed by end-2025, for a solar energy capacity to be installed
equivalent to at least 100 MW (RM16).
7. It is suggested that the Carbon Market Authority be a state-owned enterprise of a specific type, in order
to be empowered to collect the taxes and to autonomously generate revenues for its operation. If in the
future a Law on Climate Change is enacted, this Authority could at that time be integrated within the
framework of that law.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Table 1. Côte d'Ivoire: RSF Reform Measure Matrix
Development
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
Exposed and cooperatives) and preparations for the introduction of insurance insurance product for with procedures;
vulnerable products for the sector's stakeholders by the end of December 2025. the cotton sector partial financial
agriculture available (end December contribution to
sector 2025). subsidize
insurance
premiums for the
second stage of
the project.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
67
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
68 INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
deploy the multi-hazard early warning system in the Adzopé 2024; 4th 2024) Meteorological
Vulnerability
department. This early warning system will enable rapid responses to EFF/ECF review. Organization) in
to flooding
and mitigation of the impact of disasters, both in the short and long the framework of
and coastal
term. Prior to nationwide implementation, the early warning system Climate Risk Early
erosion
will be tested in a pilot phase in the Adzopé department. A report Warning Systems
summarizing the first alerts will be produced in December 2024. initiative from the
UN, World Bank.
RM10. C-PIMA and End of October - Road design manual
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Design and adopt standardized maintenance methodologies for road green PFM TA 2024 (3rd (end March 2024);
infrastructure that take into account the impact of climate change; report EFF/ECF review) - Stocktaking report (end
and pilot their implementation in the Greater Abidjan area. October 2024).
69
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
Table 1. Côte d'Ivoire: RSF Reform Measure Matrix (continued)
70 INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
Development
Key Diagnostic Proposed
Reform Measure Expected Outcome Partner
Challenge Reference Timing
Role/IMF CD
RM11. End of - First five audits completed KFW, World Bank
- Implement plans to operationalize the mandatory energy audit September (end September 2025) and EU
system for entities with annual energy consumption equal to or 2025 (5th - List of approved energy
greater than a benchmark1 for the industrial, tertiary and EFF/ECF auditors (end March 2025);
transportation sectors in 2025, and complete the first 5 audits by the review) - List of organizations
end of September 2025 and an energy labeling system for new air subject to energy audits
conditioners, refrigerators and electric lamps by December 2024. (end March 2025);
- Notice to importers on the
administrative procedure
for applying for an energy
Reducing
label (end December
greenhouse
2024).
gas emissions -
RM12. World Bank End of - Request technical IMF TA to
- Continue to apply the existing fuel pricing mechanism with automatic reports [Fund December assistance from IMF staff elaborate the
adjustment to smooth price volatility and preserve tax revenues. In TA] 2025; 6th (October 2024). strategy on
addition, given that the mechanism already includes a carbon taxation EFF/ECF - Strategy on carbon carbon taxation
component (Conformité aux Normes de Qualité (CNQ)), the review taxation adopted by the
Government undertakes to develop a carbon taxation strategy Government (end
tailored to Côte d'Ivoire's needs and in line with IMF technical December 2025);
assistance, and to make any necessary adjustments to fuel prices in - If necessary, adopt a
line with this strategy by the end of December 2025 at the latest. legislative text to adjust
fuel prices
RM13. World Bank End of April - Decree to promote electric GIZ
Adopt a decree to promote electric mobility in Côte d'Ivoire. In order reports 2024 (2nd mobility in Côte d'Ivoire
to help achieve the 10 percent target for electric vehicles in the vehicle EFF/ECF (end-April 2024)
fleet by 2030, as set out in the NDCs, the government plans to adopt review)
this decree on electric mobility by the end of April 2024. The decree
will address issues such as the installation of electric charging stations,
technical inspections of electric vehicles, insurance for electric vehicles,
and compliance with standards for battery charging stations.
1
Industry: 1500 ton of oil equivalent (toe) or 2000 MWh; Tertiary and Transportation: 500 toe or 1000 MWh.
Table 1. Côte d'Ivoire: RSF Reform Measure Matrix (concluded)
Development
Key Diagnostic Proposed
Reform Measure Expected Outcome Partner
Challenge Reference Timing
Role/IMF CD
RM14. End of - Strategy on carbon IMF TA to
- As part of the carbon taxation strategy, the government will December taxation adopted by the elaborate the
examine the existing environmental tax system on combustion 2025; 6th Government (end strategy on
engine vehicles and, if necessary, adopt reforms to the taxation of EFF/ECF December 2025); carbon taxation
these vehicles in line with the objectives of the NDCs. More review. - If necessary, issue
specifically, the Government intends to put in place a legal regulations for
framework that ensures coherence between the different parts of environmental vehicle
the system, notably between the application of registration fees, tax reforms
import duties, taxes, and other regulations relevant in terms of
their impact on the promotion of cleaner, more efficient cars.
RM15. World Bank End of - Draft 2025 budget law
Continue to integrate funding from the windows (guichets) of the reports [Fund October 2024 (end October 2024);
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change TA] (3rd EFF/ECF
(UNFCCC) windows (Global Environment Facility (GEF), Green review)
Climate Fund (GCF) and Adaptation Fund (AF)), associated
environmental taxes and earmarked fees, listed in MEFP Annex I,
into the State budget, and align them with NDCs where
applicable.
RM16. CCDR End of - Two decrees approving EU, World Bank
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
Finalize the tendering process for the development, construction IFC report December agreements for the
and operation of solar power plants to help achieve the NDC “Unlocking 2025; 6th construction, operation
targets. In this context, the competitive procurement process for Private EFF/ECF and transfer of two solar
the independent power producers selected as a result of the Investment: A review photovoltaic power
above-mentioned tenders must be completed by the end of 2025 Roadmap to plants (end December
for a solar power capacity to be installed equivalent to at least achieve 2025)
100 MW. Côte d’Ivoire’s
42 percent
renewable
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
energy target
by 2030”
71
No. TAXES TAXES – Original Text
72
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
1 TAX ON THE EXPORT OF SCRAP METAL AND TAXE SUR L’EXPORTATION DE LA FERRAILLE ET DES SOUS-PRODUITS
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
4 TAX ON FUEL DISPENSING PUMPS TAXE SUR LES POMPES DISTRIBUTRICES DE CARBURANT (loi n° 2003-489
du 26 décembre 2003 portant régime financier, fiscale et domanial des
State Budget
collectivités territoriales et article 15 de l’annexe fiscale à la loi de Finances n°
2023-1000 du 18 décembre 2003 portant Budget de l’Etat pour l’année 2024)
5 OPERATING TAX FOR WATER WITHDRAWAL FROM TAXE D'EXPLOITATION POUR LE PRELEVEMENT D'EAU DANS LES NAPPES
AQUIFERS AQUIFERES
6 The renewal fee La taxe de renouvellement
FORESTRY The fee for works of general interest TAXES FORESTIERES La redevance au titre des travaux d’intérêt général
TAXES (Article 1097 à 1098
Levy on sales of standing timber. Prélèvement sur les ventes de bois sur pied.
du CGI)
Reforestation tax taxe de reboisement
Côte d’Ivoire’s overall and external public debt remain at moderate risk of debt distress. The
external debt service-to-revenue indicator breaches the threshold three times, in 2024, 2025 and
2026, one additional breach compared to the last debt sustainability analysis (DSA) due to the
inclusion of the January 2024 Eurobond emission in the baseline but without the debt
management operation (DMO) as it is still being finalized. Though the ratio remains below the
threshold during the remainder of the projection period. The other projected external debt burden
indicators are below their thresholds under the baseline. All indicators are susceptible to stress
scenarios, the most extreme of which involves a shock to exports. The PV of overall debt-to-GDP
ratio is below its threshold, but exceeds it in most stress scenarios, the most extreme of which
involves the shock to exports. The impact of the deterioration in debt burden metrics is mitigated
by the limited number of breaches, Côte d’Ivoire’s history of successful implementation of reforms
under the current and the past two Fund arrangements, and its strong track record of market
access, sustained active debt management, and moderate risk signal from the market financing
pressures tool. This assessment is further supported by the recent Eurobond issuance, which has
been announced to be mainly used for a DMO and should improve debt sustainability prospects.
The space to absorb shocks remains limited.
1 Under the revised Debt Sustainability Framework for Low-Income Countries, Côte d’Ivoire’s Composite
Indicator (CI) is 2.94 based on the October 2023 WEO and the 2022 CPIA, corresponding to a medium debt
carrying capacity.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
• All guaranteed SOE debt and on-lent debt is included in the debt stock in the baseline.3
• Non-guaranteed SOE debt is captured as a contingent liability shock - this shock is set at
0.7 percent of GDP.4
2. Efforts to increase the government’s capacity to record and monitor public debt and
contingent liabilities continue. The authorities are committed to further enhancing data coverage of
SOEs in the DSA baseline, including consolidating the general government fiscal accounts with the
financial statements of the SOEs (on revenue, expenditure, and financing) and corresponding 20-year
projections. The authorities see this consolidation as a prerequisite for incorporating SOE debt into total
debt (in the baseline) and have received technical assistance (TA) to advance this task. Additionally,
further work on data reconciliation with the World Bank Debt Reporting System is ongoing. As part of
2 The debt owed to the West-African Development Bank (BOAD) was reclassified from domestic to external debt to
harmonize the treatment of BOAD debt in the WAEMU region. The CFAF issuance in the regional market is still
classified as domestic due to lack of data. This DSA continues to exclude external private debt from external debt
due to limited information on the outstanding stock of external private debt and related payments. The SDR use is
recorded as domestic debt due to the lending arrangement between the government and the BECAO.
3
The amount corresponding to the debt service due by the Port Autonome d’Abidjan (PAA) is added to the revenue
for the calculation of the external debt service to revenue ratio to take into account that the PAA has been servicing
its debt and is in financially sound situation.
4 Non-guaranteed SOE debt and local government debt are not included in the baseline because of limited
information.
the IDA Sustainable Development Finance Policy (SDFP), authorities have been implementing reforms
(Performance and Policy Actions or PPAs) in the areas of debt transparency (by publishing on-lent loans
to SOEs on a quarterly basis,), fiscal sustainability (by adopting a legal framework for collection and
oversight of non-tax revenue), and debt management (by adopting a mechanism for approving on-
lending to SOEs).
3. The magnitude of the shock in the contingent liability stress test applied in the sensitivity
analysis reflects potential additional liabilities. The LIC-DSF default settings are applied for the
contingent liabilities shock. They could emanate from SOE debt not captured in the data coverage,
especially from non-guaranteed debt and domestic arrears, public-private partnership agreements, and
the financial sector. Total contingent liabilities for the CL test are estimated at 8 percent of GDP
(Text Table 2). The stock of public private partnerships represents about 6.6 percent of GDP at end-2022,
with more than half of investment commitments in the energy sector. The tailored stress test includes a
0.7 percent of GDP shock for risks related to SOEs, a 2.3 percent of GDP shock to accommodate
potential fiscal risks on 35 percent of the PPP capital stock, and a financial sector shock of 5 percent
of GDP.
Text Table 2. Côte d'Ivoire: Magnitude of the Contingent Liability Stress Test
1 The country's coverage of public debt The central government plus social security, central bank, government-guaranteed debt
Default Used for the analysis Reasons for deviations from the default settings
2 Other elements of the general government not captured in 1. 0 percent of GDP 0
3 SoE's debt (guaranteed and not guaranteed by the government) 1/ 0.7 percent of GDP 0.7 To reflect the share of non-guaranteed debt not included in the DSA
4 PPP 35 percent of PPP stock 2.30
5 Financial market (the default value of 5 percent of GDP is the minimum value) 5 percent of GDP 5
Total (2+3+4+5) (in percent of GDP) 8.0
1/ The default shock of 2% of GDP will be triggered for countries whose government-guaranteed debt is not fully captured under the country's public debt definition (1.). If it is already included in the government debt (1.) and risks
associated with SoE's debt not guaranteed by the government is assessed to be negligible, a country team may reduce this to 0%.
DEBT BACKGROUND
4. Public debt increased significantly over the last few years, with external debt growing as
a share of total debt.5 The increase in indebtedness over 2017-2022 was driven by higher recourse to
external debt including to finance an increase in investment and social spending in the context of the
National Development Plan 2021-2025, as well as economic spillovers from the war in Ukraine and
adverse external financing conditions. The medium-term debt strategy 2023-2026 envisaged that on
average 44 percent of new financing would come from external sources, against 63 percent projected
for 2023, and favor borrowing in euros and CFA francs to limit exchange rate risk. Already a large share
of external borrowing is denominated in euros. Public debt stood at 58.1 percent of GDP at end-2022,
5In this DSA, Public and Publicly Guaranteed external debt excludes claims under Debt Reduction-Development
Contract (C2D), which were cancelled in the context of HIPC debt relief. The C2D is a debt restructuring tool under
which Côte d'Ivoire continues to service its bilateral debts to France and Spain until repayment. The amount
corresponding to this bilateral debt service is transferred back to the country as grants to finance poverty reduction
programs. Flows associated with the C2D process are included by IMF staff in the external and fiscal accounts to
capture gross cash flows (debt service and grants). See IMF Country Report no14/358 and Supp.1, 11/21/2014 for a
detailed discussion.
about 6.4 percent for 2023, down from 6.7 percent in 2022. Inflation eased to an estimated
4.4 percent in 2023 from 5.2 percent in 2022, reflecting lower import prices.
• The assumptions in the baseline scenario are consistent with the macroeconomic framework
under the RSF arrangement request. (Text Tables 2 and 3). The authorities requested an
arrangement of 150 percent quota, representing about US$1.3 billion to support long-term BOP
needs, which would complement the ongoing EFF/ECF arrangements to boost adaption and
mitigation policies to cope with the adverse impacts of climate change. As the budget is fully
financed under the EFF/ECF arrangements, the RSF financing is conservatively assumed to substitute
for domestic financing.6 The first review of the EFF/ECF arrangements showed strong performance
with all quantitative criteria and structural benchmarks (SB) met. The end-December QPCs have
been met and most ITs have been confirmed according to preliminary data. The authorities are
making progress towards meeting the May and June 2024 SB, including the MTRS strategy.
• GDP growth is projected to range between 6 and 6.5 percent through the medium term,
similarly to the previous DSA. Real GDP growth is projected at 6.5 percent in 2024, supported by
stronger consumption and investment growth on the demand side, and an improvement in the
primary sector on the supply side, notably export agriculture. Growth is expected to converge
towards 6 percent in the following years and over the medium term, thanks to continued
investments in human capital, infrastructure and reforms to improve competition in the digital,
telecom, financial and transport sectors supported by the World Bank Development Policy Financing
series. Growth is expected to be supported by industry and services as reforms improve competition
on the supply side and by investments in infrastructure and human capital on the demand side. The
implementation of a strong reform agenda from the NDP could, however, catalyze stronger
business confidence and investment, and further lift productivity and growth, while persistent
insecurity in the north of the country, still tight financing conditions, and uncertain global
developments represent downside risks.
• Gradual return to subdued inflation over the medium term. Annual average inflation (CPI) is
projected to ease further to 3.8 percent in 2024, reflecting a downward trend of global food and
commodity prices and the BCEAO’s monetary tightening. It is expected to remain low at around
2 percent in the medium term, benefiting from the exchange rate peg to the euro.
• Wider budget deficits in the short term. Primary and overall fiscal deficits reached, respectively,
4.6 and 6.8 percent of GDP in 2022, due to the response to adverse spillovers from war in Ukraine
and higher security spending to respond to insecurity in the north and the acceleration of public
investment under the NDP. While the NDP prominently focuses on an increase in private sector
investment, it also has goals for public investment and debt financed public investment projects.
The authorities are committed to converging to the regional target of 3 percent of GDP of overall
fiscal deficit in 2025 through strong consolidation efforts, especially by raising domestic revenue,
while preserving priority spending. The consolidation expected under the ECF/EFF arrangements
6
External debt sustainability indicators would improve to the extent external financing is replaced.
favors domestic revenue mobilization (DRM) efforts to preserve much needed capital investment
and social priority spending.
• Higher tax revenue projections. One of the authorities’ key goals under the ECF/EFF arrangements
is to keep Côte d’Ivoire’s debt rating at moderate risk of debt distress. This requires significant and
sustained efforts to mobilize revenues under the program and beyond. A quantitative performance
criterion monitors the tax revenue level through a floor. Continued improvements are expected
through strengthened digitalization and tax administration but also through tax policy, supported
by the design and implementation of a comprehensive medium-term revenue mobilization strategy
(MTRS) and technical assistance of the Fund, the World Bank and other donors (structural
benchmark). Tax revenue is assumed to increase from 12.9 percent of GDP in 2022 to 15.1 percent
of GDP in 2025, reaching close to 18 percent by the end of the projection period. Efforts should
include eliminating VAT tax exemptions, accelerating the removal of business tax exemptions,
streamlining the personal income tax regime, improving property regime, fully rolling out a new IT
system and pursuing public financial management reforms. A conservative approach was taken on
additional revenue measures generated by the RSF, especially on carbon taxation, which were
assumed to be revenue neutral.
• Revenue coverage. It remains the same as the two last DSAs consistent with the Government
Finance Statistics Manual 2014 (GFSM 2014) and WAEMU directives.7
• A narrowing current account deficit. The external current account deficit is estimated to have
declined to 5.8 percent in 2023 from 7.7 percent of GDP in 2022, and is expected to narrow to
2.3 percent of GDP in 2028. Exports are expected to grow more than imports from 2024 onwards
helped by the implementation of NDP and Côte d’Ivoire 2030 policies, especially on private sector
development and export diversification. Exports also benefit from higher prices in key export crops,
especially cocoa. Fiscal consolidation should also support a narrowing of the current account deficit
over the medium term and boost the merchandise trade surplus. Official reserves remained under
pressure in 2023, with Côte d’Ivoire contributing to the decline in FX reserves at the regional level.
The climate-related investment level is assumed to reflect the authorities’ identified financing and
broadly consistent with an overall investment path somewhat below the level assumed in the
2021-2025 NDP as the envisaged 74 percent of private sector participation under the NDP has not
materialized so far.
• Risks. These assumptions are subject to downside risks, though the balance of risks has improved.
Regional security challenges could generate spending pressures and weigh on confidence, while a
renewed spike in international oil prices could put pressure on tax revenue from petroleum
products. Notwithstanding the recent successful bond issuance, a renewed deterioration in external
financing conditions could increase debt service costs over time, making it challenging to meet
significant financing needs. A weaker-than-anticipated recovery in regional FX reserves could also
7 It includes off-budget earmarked revenues collected by public enterprises, specifically the retroactive inclusion of
the Perequation Produit revenue collected by the refinery (SIR) and taxes paid for and collected by the state in
relation to donor externally financed projects.
weigh on investor confidence, as could a deteriorating regional security situation. The upside risks
consist mainly of the strict implementation of the NDP, and global inflationary pressures subsidizing
faster than anticipated, which could lead to more favorable financing conditions.
National income
GDP at constant prices 0.9 7.4 6.7 6.4 6.5 6.4 6.3 6.1 6.0
GDP deflator 1.5 2.3 2.8 2.9 2.3 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0
External sector (on the basis of CFA francs)
Exports of goods, f.o.b., at current prices -2.9 18.2 20.5 5.5 14.7 11.0 7.1 8.2 7.0
Imports of goods, f.o.b., at current prices -1.5 24.3 40.7 -2.8 6.3 5.2 6.1 6.6 6.2
Export volume -2.4 10.1 0.9 6.2 -1.3 9.9 9.2 7.7 6.7
Import volume 16.2 1.1 4.5 7.9 7.0 5.8 5.9 5.8 5.0
External Sector
Current account balance -3.1 -4.0 -7.7 -5.8 -3.8 -2.7 -2.6 -2.4 -2.3
Non-interest current account balance -2.1 -2.9 -6.5 -4.5 -2.5 -1.4 -1.4 -1.3 -1.3
Sources: Ivorian authorities, World Bank, and IMF staff estimates and projections.
Balance of Payments
Exports of goods and services 23.0 21.6 19.0 23.7 22.4 19.6
Imports of goods and services 18.4 16.2 14.4 18.3 16.2 14.4
Non-interest current account balance -2.5 -2.0 -2.9 -2.1 -1.6 -2.8
Current account balance -3.7 -2.9 -3.6 -3.3 -2.5 -3.4
Foreign direct investment (net inflows) 2.0 2.3 2.7 1.9 2.3 2.7
Sources: Ivorian authorities, World Bank and IMF staff estimates and projections.
7. The authorities’ debt management strategy aims to meet gross financing needs while
ensuring debt sustainability, based on a mix of external and domestic financing instruments.
The authorities intend to rely more on domestic financing over time as stated in their 2023-2026
medium-term debt strategy. The authorities are expecting to borrow externally around 66 percent
of total financing in 2023 due to the tightening of domestic financing conditions and to reduce the
external borrowing to 36 percent by 2026. The level of external commercial borrowing is set close
to projected external commercial debt service. Multilateral and bilateral financing is projected to
gradually decline from 5 percent of GDP in 2022 to around 2 percent in 2042. In the short term, the
government is expected to rely on both concessional and non-concessional borrowing to meet its
financing needs. The debt service of Eurobonds represents 25 percent of external debt service over
the next 3 years. The authorities also intend to balance the recourse to the international and
regional markets given the potential crowding-out effect at the regional level. Domestic financing is
assumed to rely on issuances of CFAF securities with the following maturities from 2024 onwards:
less than one-year (12 percent of issuances), one to three years (8 percent), three to seven years
(46 percent) and more than seven years (34 percent). The authorities are continuing to strengthen
processes related to debt management, with World Bank support and have shown gradual and
steady improvement in the World Bank Debt Transparency Heatmap since 2020. Moreover, debt
management has been further strengthened by upgrading the institutional and legislative
framework with the creation of the new debt department, la Direction Générale des Financements,
which was finalized in late 2023, and the new law on public debt policies submitted to Parliament in
September 2023.
8 The other variables from the macroeconomic framework consist of five variables: real GDP growth, remittances,
import coverage of reserves, the square of import coverage of reserves, and world economic growth. The composite
indicator uses ten years of data (5 years of history and 5 years of projections) to smooth out economic cycles.
Debt Service in % of
Exports 15
Revenue 18
Components Coefficients (A) 10-year average CI Score components Contribution of
values (B) (A*B) = (C) components
CPIA 0.385 3.661 1.41 48%
Real growth rate (in percent) 2.719 5.840 0.16 5%
Import coverage of reserves (in
percent) 4.052 39.591 1.60 55%
Import coverage of reserves^2 (in
percent) -3.990 15.674 -0.63 -21%
Remittances (in percent) 2.022 0.276 0.01 0%
World economic growth (in
percent) 13.520 2.889 0.39 13%
CI rating Medium
10. Given Côte d’Ivoire’s reliance on global capital markets, a tailored test for international
market financing was conducted. Côte d’Ivoire issued sizeable Eurobonds both in 2020 and early
2021 (for about US$1.2 billion and US$1 billion, respectively) and used about half of the 2020 issuance
to buy back bonds with shorter maturities and reduce the currency risk. In January 2024, the country
also issued US$2.6 of Eurobonds mainly for liabilities management operations which are to be
finalized (Box 1). Its debt management strategy aims at leveraging global capital markets to finance
part of the country’s gross financing needs when market’s conditions are favorable. A tailored test for
market financing assumes a temporary increase in the cost of new commercial external borrowing by
400 basis points combined with a nominal depreciation of 15 percent of the CFAF vis-à-vis the
US$ and a shortening of maturities and of grace periods.9
11. Standard stress tests on real GDP growth, primary balance, exports, current transfers,
foreign exchange (FX) depreciation, and a tailored test on commodity prices have also been
applied. The first four shocks set each of the above variables to the lower of its historical average
minus one standard deviation, or its baseline projection minus one standard deviation. The FX
9The share of USD denominated debt is estimated to be decreasing over time. The considered shortening of
maturities of commercial external borrowing are as follows: if the original maturity is greater than 5 years, the new
maturity is set to 5 years; if the original maturity is less than 5 years, the new maturity is shortened by 2/3.
depreciation considers a nominal depreciation of 30 percent of the CFAF vis-à-vis the US$ in the first
year of the projection. The commodity price shock captures the impact of a sudden one standard
deviation decline in commodity prices.
13. Applying judgement to maintain a moderate risk of debt distress is warranted by the
country’s recent Eurobond issuance, the strong track record of market access and active
consideration of liability management operations. Côte d’Ivoire has generally enjoyed consistent
market access through eurobonds issuance for about the past decade and continues to benefit
from one of the strongest credit ratings in Sub-Saharan Africa. Guarantees from regional banks may
allow for better financing conditions on external public commercial loans in case of delays in
market normalization. The recent Eurobond issuance is included in the baseline but not the
ongoing DMOs which are expected to be completed soon. The proceeds from the Eurobond
issuance will mainly be used for buyback and refinancing of Eurobonds and commercial loans.
Once the operations are finalized, it should improve debt sustainability, including liquidity
indicators, which should be reflected in the next EFF/ECF program review DSA (Box 1). It is also
supported by the risk signal from the market financing pressures tool, which indicates moderate
risk (Figure 6).
14. All other PPG debt indicators are below their corresponding thresholds for the next
ten years in the baseline scenario. The PV of external debt-to-GDP is expected to decrease from
31 percent in 2023 to 21 percent in 2033 (Table 1 and Figure 1), well below the relevant threshold of
40. The PV of external debt to exports peaks at 132 percent at the beginning of the projection
period before decreasing and the debt service-to-exports ratio is expected to reach 15 percent in
2025, with thresholds respectively at 180 and 15 percent. After the 2024–26 spike, the debt-service-
to-revenue ratio is expected to remain below the threshold throughout the following years. The
trajectory of the debt-service-to-revenue ratio underscores the criticality of improving domestic
revenue mobilization to provide the authorities with a sustainable source of funding for their
important development needs and to provide buffers on debt service.
1,500
respectively. Most of the issuance will be used for a
1,000
debt management operation (DMO) to buy back and 500
15. Exports and depreciation shocks would have a significant negative impact on
Côte d’Ivoire’s external debt sustainability. An export shock would cause debt service-to-export
ratio to breach the threshold from 2024 onward and, while most shocks would cause the debt-
service-to-revenue indicator to breach the threshold starting in 2024. This highlights the
importance of accelerating policies aiming at active debt management to moderate reliance on
external borrowing to address liquidity management in order to strengthen the resilience of the
Ivorian economy to shocks.
over the projection period, to around 38 percent by 2033. Meanwhile, the PV of debt-to-revenue
and grants ratio would decline from around 321 percent in 2023 to 202 percent in 2033. Finally,
the debt service-to-revenue and grants ratio is projected to soar to 49 percent in 2024 and
decline back to around 21 percent at the end of the projection period. This again underscores the
importance of strengthening domestic revenue mobilization.
17. Standard stress tests highlight that Côte d’Ivoire’s most extreme public debt
vulnerability would emerge from a shock to exports (Figure 2 and Table 4). Under the
standard exports stress test, the PV of public debt-to-GDP would breach its corresponding
threshold of 55 percent starting in 2024 and would continue increasing afterwards. This shock
would lead to an explosive pattern of the two debt indicators, which could be exacerbated if
exports were to decrease even further. It confirms the country’s dependence on exports, as in the
case of external debt, hence the importance of accelerating diversification policies.
19. Economic vulnerabilities to climate change are mostly due to heavy reliance on
agriculture, and the concentration of industrial and services activity in coastal areas.
Agriculture employs about half of the workforce and contributes about 17 percent of GDP and
10 percent of tax revenues. Climate change would affect the debt sustainability indicators
through its negative impact on (i) output due to productivity decrease and loss of suitable land,
(ii) the fiscal balance owing to weaker revenue mobilization as, notably, agriculture becomes
more vulnerable, and increased spending due to rising natural disaster cost and spending needs
to build resilient infrastructure, and (iii) the balance of payment.
20. Côte d’Ivoire’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) address exposure and
vulnerability to climate change and imply significant costs. The NDC emphasizes the
importance of increasing resilience in agriculture, improving water resource governance,
addressing health challenges by building capacity and increasing health surveillance, and
increasing the resilience of coastal zones. The implementation cost of climate policies is
estimated at US$22 billion (US$12 billion in adaptation and US$10 billion in mitigation). Private
financing is expected to play a major role in financing (assumed to cover 74 percent of the
National Development Plan), as well as international sources such as the Green Climate Fund and
the Adaptation Fund.
21. Raising adequate financing to build resilience is a major challenge. The Ivorian
authorities would need to develop a full green finance strategy to cover the above-mentioned
financing needs. Given limitations in the domestic financing system, all sources of financing
would need to be considered, traditional donors but also international climate funds, which could
unlock significant private financing, as well as different types of financing. The authorities have
already used blended financing through regional bank provided guarantees and ESG bonds.
Reform measures to address financing will thus likely play an important role to maximize the
catalytic impact of Fund financial support through the RSF.
22. A severe natural disaster could occur in the form of flooding impacting coastal
populations’ livelihoods and the agriculture and tourism sectors. 56 percent of population of
Côte d’Ivoire live in an urban costal area. According to the World Bank,10 floods are extremely
damaging in the country with an estimated annual cost (expected value) of about 3 percent of
GDP due to fluvial and pluvial floods (not accounting for seawater due to a lack of data) along the
coast through the cost of mortality and the damage to assets and economic production. The
standard natural disaster stress test is informed by the World Bank flooding cost estimates. The
calibration assumes one-off 9 percentage points decline in real GDP growth and a standard size
of associated export growth shock of 3.5 percentage points.
23. Customized stress test shows that the natural disaster shock is the most extreme
shock of public debt. The PV of debt to-revenue ratio would surge to about 370 percent in 2024
and the debt service-to-revenue ratio would spike to 69 percent in 2025. The results highlight the
urgent need for addressing climate change challenges.
24. Modeling scenarios highlight that Côte d’Ivoire would benefit from investments in
resilient infrastructure and greater revenue mobilization to attenuate the negative effect of
natural disasters on debt sustainability. The complementary outcomes of the DIGNAD model
on a similar flood shock to one described in ¶22 show the GDP and public debt effects of the
disaster for two scenarios: (1) the authorities invest in cheaper, non-resilient infrastructure in the
years before the disaster, and (2) the authorities invest in more expensive, resilient infrastructure.
Not only is the GDP drop less pronounced for resilient infrastructure, but it also recovers more
quickly compared to the scenario with non-resilient infrastructure investment. Similarly, while the
flood shock raises public debt in both types of investment, with resilient infrastructure the effect
is more muted compared to non-resilient infrastructure investment. A different scenario assumes
the same parameters for the Ivorian economy and the same effect of coastal floods, but instead
infrastructure investment and recovery are financed by domestic revenue mobilization. As before,
the resilient infrastructure makes the effect of a natural disaster more muted both for GDP and
for total public debt. Moreover, revenue financing makes the effect on public debt much more
muted in the short and long term, as revenues are used to finance the gap. The financing
composition to build resilient infrastructure will be key to keep the debt at moderate risk of
distress and should favor grants, revenue mobilization, and concessional financing.
10
The Cost of Coastal Zone Degradation in West Africa: Benin, Cote d'Ivoire, Senegal, and Togo (worldbank.org).
0 66
64
-1
62
-2
60
-3
58
-4 56
-5 54
-6 52
50
-7
54
53
52
51
50
49
48
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
2037
2038
2039
2040
revenue ratio would cross the threshold in the most extreme shock scenarios. The space to absorb
shocks is limited with the external debt-service-to-revenue ratio breaching and then remaining below
but close to the threshold during the projection period (Figure 5). This reinforces the focus under the
ECF/EFF-arrangements of policy commitments to intensify revenue mobilization and promote private-
sector led economic transformation, including diversifying the export base. It is also crucial to have a
prudent external borrowing strategy aimed at balancing the costs and risks of new loans to preserve
Côte d’Ivoire’s borrowing space and medium-term debt sustainability. Replacing external borrowing
with RSF financing could also be considered to improve debt burden indicators. The recent successful
eurobond issuance marks an important turning point after two years of adverse external financing
conditions. The ECF/EFF and the RSF arrangements, along with the World Bank DPO should catalyze
other donors’ financing at concessional terms.
26. This DSA indicates that the overall risk of debt distress also remains moderate, and
stress tests highlight high vulnerabilities of external and total debt to shocks. While the overall
debt sustainability risk remains moderate, the PV of public debt-to-GDP breaches its threshold of
55 percent starting in 2024 under the most extreme shock (exports) arising from the standard stress
tests. Three out of four external debt indicators would breach their threshold under the most extreme
shocks (exports and depreciation). Risks have been exacerbated by the post COVID environment, the
war in Ukraine, and global monetary tightening, as the global growth recovery, and hence that of
Ivorian exports, could prove weaker than currently projected, even if it benefits from high cocoa prices
in the current environment.
27. The granularity assessment indicates that there is limited space to absorb shocks
(Figure 6). Under the module, which allows qualifying the moderate risk of debt-distress, Côte d’Ivoire
is assessed as having limited space to absorb shocks, especially when considering the debt service
ratios, both to exports and to revenue, stressing the liquidity vulnerability of the country and the
importance of strengthening DRM and diversifying exports.
28. The authorities are appropriately focused on building resilience against shocks to debt
sustainability. Keeping the country at moderate risk of debt distress is a priority for the authorities
and is therefore an anchor under the ECF/EFF arrangements. The authorities’ effort to consolidate
through continued and sustained domestic revenue mobilization is paramount while remaining
committed to containing medium-term public expenditure, to reach the WAEMU target of 3 percent
of GDP fiscal deficit, another anchor under the Fund-supported program. Additionally, the DSA results
highlight the need to carefully monitor debt indicators, use prudent GDP growth assumptions, create
fiscal space, implement judicious policies to preserve macroeconomic stability, and have full oversight
of SOE debt contracting. Within this context, the authorities are committed toward fully integrating
SOE debt in their debt sustainability assessment. A careful and active debt management, including
balancing domestic and external debt, will be crucial to preserve debt sustainability and keep the
country at moderate risk of debt distress.
AUTHORITIES’ VIEWS
29. The authorities agreed that Côte d’Ivoire remains at moderate risk of debt distress.
They are strongly committed to keeping the country at moderate risk of debt distress. They are
aware that the external debt service to revenue ratio breaches the threshold three times in 2024,
2025, and 2026, leaving limited margin to absorb shocks. However, the use of their recent
Eurobond proceeds for DMO is expected to strengthen overall debt sustainability including liquidity
indicators and reduce debt vulnerabilities. Furthermore, they have continued to actively manage
their debt portfolio and monitor closely the concessionality of new contracts and the pace of
disbursements to remain in the same debt distress category. The authorities are strongly committed
to the policies and targets under the ECF/EFF arrangements for increasing domestic revenue
mobilization.
Figure 1. Côte d’Ivoire: Indicators of Public and Publicly Guaranteed External Debt Under
Alternative Scenarios, 2023–331/
10
50
5 Most extreme shock: Exports Most extreme shock: Exports
0 0
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
25 25
20 20
15 15
10 10
5 5
Most extreme shock: Exports Most extreme shock: One-time depreciation 2/
0 0
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
Figure 2. Côte d’Ivoire: Indicators of Public Debt Under Alternative Scenarios, 2023–33
PV of Debt-to-GDP Ratio
70
60
50
40
30
20
Most extreme shock: Exports
10
0
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
350 70
300 60
250 50
200 40
150 30
20
100
Borrowing assumptions on additional financing needs resulting from the Default User defined
stress tests*
Shares of marginal debt
External PPG medium and long-term 61% 61%
Domestic medium and long-term 34% 34%
Domestic short-term 5% 5%
Terms of marginal debt
External MLT debt
Avg. nominal interest rate on new borrowing in USD 3.4% 3.4%
Avg. maturity (incl. grace period) 18 18
Avg. grace period 5 5
Domestic MLT debt
Avg. real interest rate on new borrowing 3.6% 3.6%
Avg. maturity (incl. grace period) 1 1
Avg. grace period 0 0
Domestic short-term debt
Avg. real interest rate 3.5% 3.5%
* Note: The public DSA allows for domestic financing to cover the additional financing needs generated by the
shocks under the stress tests in the public DSA. Default terms of marginal debt are based on baseline 10-year
projections.
1/ The most extreme stress test is the test that yields the highest ratio in or before 2033. The stress test with a
one-off breach is also presented (if any), while the one-off breach is deemed away for mechanical signals. When
a stress test with a one-off breach happens to be the most exterme shock even after disregarding the one-off
breach, only that stress test (with a one-off breach) would be presented.
Gross Nominal PPG External Debt Debt-creating flows Unexpected Changes in Debt 1/
(in percent of GDP; DSA vintages) (Percent of GDP) (past 5 years, percent of GDP)
Current DSA
40
80 Residual 40
Previous DSA
proj .
70 DSA-2017 Interquartile
Price and 20 30 range (25-75)
60 exchange
rate
50 Real GDP
20
growth 0 Change in PPG
40 debt 3/
10
Nominal
30 interest rate
-20
20 0
Median
Current
10 account +
FDI
-1 0
-40
0 Change in
5-year 5-year
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
PPG debt 3/ Contribution of Distribution across LICs 2/
historical projected -2 0 unexpected
change change
Public debt
Gross Nominal Public Debt Debt-creating flows Unexpected Changes in Debt 1/
(in percent of GDP; DSA vintages) (Percentof
(Percent of GDP)
GDP) (past 5 years, percent of GDP)
Residual 40
Current DSA
Previous DSA proj.
DSA-2017 Other debt 30
80 creatin g flows
20 Interquartile
70 25 range (25-75)
Real
Exchange
60 rate 20
50
depreciation
Real GDP
0
growth 15
40
Change in debt
Real interest 10
30 rate -20
20 5
Primary deficit
10
-40 0
0 Change in debt 5-year 5-year Median
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
historical projected -5
Distribution across LICs 2/
change change Contribution of
-10 unexpected
1/ Difference betw een anticipated and actual contributions on debt ratios.
2/ Distribution across LICs for w hich LIC DSAs w ere produced.
3/ Given the relatively low private external debt for average low -income countries, a ppt change in PPG external debt should be largely explained by the drivers
of the external debt dynamics equation.
GFN 1/ EMBI 2/
Benchmarks 14 570
Values 10 596
Breach of benchmark No Yes
Potential heightened
liquidity needs Moderate
1/ Maximum gross financing needs (GFN) over 3-year baseline projection horizon.
2/ EMBI spreads correspond to the latest available data.
15 80
60
10
40
5
20
0
0
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
25
20
20
15
15
10
10
5 5
0 0
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
40 180 Threshold
35 160
140 (1-X)*Threshold
30
120
25 (1-Y)*&Threshold
100
20
80
15
60
10
40
5 20
0 0
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
14
20
12
10 15
8
10
6
4
5
2
0 0
2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
Some Substantial
Threshold Baseline Limited space space space
External debt (nominal) 1/ 31.4 32.2 35.8 36.2 37.8 36.7 35.7 34.7 33.4 25.4 19.3 22.9 32.4 Definition of external/domestic debt Currency-based
of which: public and publicly guaranteed (PPG) 31.4 32.2 35.8 36.2 37.8 36.7 35.7 34.7 33.4 25.4 19.3 22.9 32.4
Is there a material difference between the
Yes
two criteria?
Change in external debt 4.2 0.7 3.7 0.4 1.5 -1.1 -1.0 -1.0 -1.3 -1.3 -0.6
Identified net debt-creating flows 3.1 1.7 10.2 5.4 3.5 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 3.8 6.6 2.4 3.1
Non-interest current account deficit 2.1 2.9 6.6 4.6 2.7 1.3 1.4 1.2 1.2 2.0 4.1 1.7 1.8
Deficit in balance of goods and services -0.9 -0.1 3.9 2.0 0.0 -1.1 -1.2 -1.5 -1.6 -1.1 0.8 -1.1 -0.9
Exports 21.0 22.6 24.7 23.9 25.3 25.8 25.5 25.5 25.2 22.9 19.7
Debt Accumulation
Imports 20.1 22.5 28.6 25.9 25.3 24.7 24.3 24.0 23.7 21.8 20.5
5.0 20
Net current transfers (negative = inflow) 1.1 0.9 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.9 0.7
of which: official -0.1 0.0 -0.4 -0.4 -0.4 -0.2 -0.1 -0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 4.5 18
Other current account flows (negative = net inflow) 1.9 2.0 2.3 2.1 2.0 1.7 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.4 2.6 1.9 2.1
4.0 16
Net FDI (negative = inflow) 1.1 1.5 1.8 1.7 1.8 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.4 2.9 1.1 2.1
Endogenous debt dynamics 2/ -0.1 -2.7 1.8 -0.9 -1.1 -0.9 -0.9 -0.8 -0.8 -0.6 -0.5 3.5 14
Contribution from nominal interest rate 1.1 1.1 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.4 1.2 1.2 1.1 0.8 0.6 3.0 12
Contribution from real GDP growth -0.2 -2.0 -2.2 -2.0 -2.1 -2.2 -2.1 -2.0 -1.9 -1.4 -1.0
2.5 10
Contribution from price and exchange rate changes -0.9 -1.8 3.0 … … … … … … … …
Residual 3/ 1.1 -1.0 -6.5 -5.1 -1.9 -3.4 -3.4 -3.5 -3.9 -5.0 -7.2 -0.1 -4.1 2.0 8
of which: exceptional financing 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.5 6
1.0 4
Sustainability indicators
PV of PPG external debt-to-GDP ratio ... ... 31.2 31.5 32.7 31.5 30.5 29.5 28.3 21.2 16.1 0.5 2
PV of PPG external debt-to-exports ratio ... ... 126.2 131.9 129.5 122.0 119.4 115.7 112.3 92.5 81.9 0.0 0
PPG debt service-to-exports ratio 8.4 8.9 9.0 11.6 14.0 14.5 12.7 11.0 11.6 12.3 8.8 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
PPG debt service-to-revenue ratio 12.3 13.1 15.1 17.5 21.6 22.2 18.5 15.8 16.2 15.0 8.5
Gross external financing need (Million of U.S. dollars) 3121.8 4604.8 7488.0 7187.2 6978.6 6548.1 6724.3 6760.9 7464.4 12578.7 32238.3 Debt Accumulation
Grant-equivalent financing (% of GDP)
Key macroeconomic assumptions
Grant element of new borrowing (% right scale)
Real GDP growth (in percent) 0.9 7.4 6.7 6.4 6.5 6.4 6.3 6.1 6.0 5.8 5.6 6.8 6.1
GDP deflator in US dollar terms (change in percent) 3.5 6.1 -8.5 5.6 3.3 2.0 1.8 1.8 1.8 2.0 2.0 0.1 2.4
Effective interest rate (percent) 4/ 4.1 4.1 3.1 3.5 3.3 3.9 3.6 3.6 3.5 3.3 3.1 3.9 3.5 External debt (nominal) 1/
Growth of exports of G&S (US dollar terms, in percent) -4.1 22.7 6.9 8.5 16.3 10.9 6.9 8.0 6.9 5.7 6.4 3.2 7.9 of which: Private
Growth of imports of G&S (US dollar terms, in percent) -1.7 27.9 24.0 1.6 7.5 6.0 6.5 6.8 6.5 6.5 5.5 5.9 6.0 40
Grant element of new public sector borrowing (in percent) ... ... ... 16.3 11.8 16.9 18.9 18.2 17.4 16.0 17.9 ... 16.2
Government revenues (excluding grants, in percent of GDP) 14.4 15.3 14.8 15.8 16.3 16.9 17.6 17.8 18.0 18.7 20.4 13.9 17.8 35
Aid flows (in Million of US dollars) 5/ 336.3 333.1 375.5 1409.2 1216.3 1140.0 1144.4 1220.3 1265.2 773.9 425.0
30
Grant-equivalent financing (in percent of GDP) 6/ ... ... ... 1.7 1.3 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.6 0.3 ... 0.9
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
Grant-equivalent financing (in percent of external financing) 6/ ... ... ... 24.6 17.5 23.6 24.9 25.5 24.8 21.8 17.9 ... 23.0 25
Nominal GDP (Million of US dollars) 63,074 71,849 70,180 78,857 86,719 94,093 101,803 109,996 118,749 174,461 367,419
Nominal dollar GDP growth 4.4 13.9 -2.3 12.4 10.0 8.5 8.2 8.0 8.0 7.9 7.7 6.8 8.6 20
15
Memorandum items:
PV of external debt 7/ ... ... 31.2 31.5 32.7 31.5 30.5 29.5 28.3 21.2 16.1 10
In percent of exports ... ... 126.2 131.9 129.5 122.0 119.4 115.7 112.3 92.5 81.9
5
Total external debt service-to-exports ratio 8.4 8.9 9.0 11.6 14.0 14.5 12.7 11.0 11.6 12.3 8.8
PV of PPG external debt (in Million of US dollars) 21896.0 24835.9 28381.2 29620.0 31002.2 32452.5 33652.7 36987.6 59262.3 0
(PVt-PVt-1)/GDPt-1 (in percent) 4.2 4.5 1.4 1.5 1.4 1.1 0.6 0.7 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
Non-interest current account deficit that stabilizes debt ratio -2.1 2.1 3.0 4.3 1.2 2.4 2.3 2.3 2.5 3.3 4.8
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
4/ Current-year interest payments divided by previous period debt stock.
5/ Defined as grants, concessional loans, and debt relief.
6/ 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/ Assumes that PV of private sector debt is equivalent to its face value.
8/ Historical averages are generally derived over the past 10 years, subject to data availability, whereas projections averages are over the first year of projection and the next 10 years.
23
Table 2. Côte d’Ivoire: Public Sector Debt Sustainability Framework, Baseline Scenario, 2020‒43
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
24
2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2033 2043 Historical Projections
Public sector debt 1/ 48.1 52.1 58.1 57.8 57.4 56.5 55.4 53.9 52.6 42.3 31.6 37.9 51.4
Definition of external/domestic Currency-
of which: external debt 31.4 32.2 35.8 36.2 37.8 36.7 35.7 34.7 33.4 25.4 19.3 22.9 32.4
debt based
of which: local-currency denominated
Change in public sector debt 8.3 4.0 5.9 -0.3 -0.4 -0.9 -1.1 -1.5 -1.3 -1.9 -0.7
Is there a material difference
Identified debt-creating flows 2.4 2.9 3.7 -0.4 -0.9 -1.5 -1.4 -1.2 -1.1 -1.2 -0.3 1.0 -1.2 Yes
between the two criteria?
Primary deficit 3.6 3.0 4.6 2.8 1.8 0.6 0.8 0.7 0.8 -0.2 0.4 1.9 0.6
Revenue and grants 15.0 15.8 15.3 16.5 16.7 17.2 17.8 18.1 18.2 18.9 20.4 14.7 18.0
of which: grants 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.7 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.0 Public sector debt 1/
Primary (noninterest) expenditure 18.6 18.8 19.9 19.3 18.4 17.8 18.6 18.8 19.0 18.7 20.8 16.7 18.6
Automatic debt dynamics -1.2 -0.1 -0.6 -3.2 -2.6 -2.2 -2.1 -2.0 -1.9 -1.0 -0.7 of which: local-currency denominated
Contribution from interest rate/growth differential 1.0 -3.0 -3.8 -3.2 -2.6 -2.2 -2.1 -2.0 -1.9 -1.0 -0.7
of which: foreign-currency denominated
of which: contribution from average real interest rate 1.3 0.3 -0.5 0.3 0.9 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.1 1.4 1.0
of which: contribution from real GDP growth -0.4 -3.3 -3.3 -3.5 -3.5 -3.5 -3.4 -3.2 -3.1 -2.4 -1.7 70
Contribution from real exchange rate depreciation -2.2 2.9 3.2 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
60
Other identified debt-creating flows 0.0 0.0 -0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -0.1 0.0
50
Privatization receipts (negative) 0.0 0.0 -0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Recognition of contingent liabilities (e.g., bank recapitalization) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 40
Debt relief (HIPC and other) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 30
Other debt creating or reducing flow (please specify) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
20
Residual 6.0 1.2 2.2 0.1 0.5 0.7 0.2 -0.2 -0.2 -0.6 -0.4 2.3 -0.2
10
Sustainability indicators 0
PV of public debt-to-GDP ratio 2/ ... ... 53.3 52.8 52.3 51.3 50.2 48.8 47.6 38.1 28.4 2023 2025 2027 2029 2031 2033
PV of public debt-to-revenue and grants ratio … … 348.1 320.8 313.8 298.6 281.9 269.6 260.9 201.6 138.9
Debt service-to-revenue and grants ratio 3/ 32.4 32.8 41.5 42.3 49.1 45.8 36.7 31.6 28.4 20.8 12.4
Gross financing need 4/ 8.4 8.1 10.6 9.8 9.9 8.5 7.3 6.5 6.0 3.7 2.9 of which: held by residents
Table 3. Côte d’Ivoire: Sensitivity Analysis for Key Indicators of Public and
Publicly Guaranteed External Debt, 2023–33
(Percent)
Projections 1/
2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033
A. Alternative Scenarios
A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2023-2033 2/ 31 32 31 30 29 27 26 24 22 20 17
0 #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A
B. Bound Tests
B1. Real GDP growth 31 34 34 33 32 31 29 27 26 24 23
B2. Primary balance 31 34 35 34 34 32 31 29 27 26 24
B3. Exports 31 37 43 42 41 39 37 35 33 30 28
B4. Other flows 3/ 31 33 33 32 31 29 28 26 25 23 22
B5. Depreciation 31 41 37 36 35 34 32 30 28 26 25
B6. Combination of B1-B5 31 39 37 36 35 33 32 30 28 26 25
C. Tailored Tests
C1. Combined contingent liabilities 31 37 37 36 35 34 32 31 29 28 26
C2. Natural disaster 31 38 38 38 37 36 35 33 32 30 29
C3. Commodity price 31 33 32 32 31 30 28 27 25 24 23
C4. Market Financing 31 40 39 38 37 35 33 31 29 27 26
Threshold 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 40 40
PV of debt-to-exports ratio
Baseline 132 130 122 119 116 112 108 103 99 95 93
A. Alternative Scenarios
A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2023-2033 2/ 132 127 120 117 113 108 103 97 91 83 76
0 132 114 92 74 55 36 15 -5 -23 -40 -54
B. Bound Tests
B1. Real GDP growth 132 130 122 119 116 112 108 103 99 95 93
B2. Primary balance 132 133 135 135 132 128 124 119 114 110 107
B3. Exports 132 181 241 235 228 222 214 205 195 185 177
B4. Other flows 3/ 132 132 127 124 120 117 112 107 103 99 96
B5. Depreciation 132 130 115 113 109 106 102 97 94 90 88
B6. Combination of B1-B5 132 169 131 171 166 161 155 148 142 136 131
C. Tailored Tests
C1. Combined contingent liabilities 132 146 144 143 139 135 131 126 122 118 114
C2. Natural disaster 132 153 152 152 149 146 142 138 134 131 128
C3. Commodity price 132 131 126 124 121 118 114 110 106 101 98
C4. Market Financing 132 141 136 134 130 126 120 114 109 105 101
Threshold 180 180 180 180 180 180 180 180 180 180 180
Baseline 12 14 15 13 11 12 13 14 13 14 12
A. Alternative Scenarios
A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2023-2033 2/ 12 14 15 13 11 12 14 14 14 14 12
0 12 14 14 12 9 9 10 9 6 4 0
B. Bound Tests
B1. Real GDP growth 12 14 15 13 11 12 13 14 13 14 12
B2. Primary balance 12 14 15 14 12 12 14 15 15 15 14
B3. Exports 12 17 22 21 18 19 21 23 25 25 23
B4. Other flows 3/ 12 14 15 13 11 12 13 14 14 14 13
B5. Depreciation 12 14 15 12 11 11 13 13 13 13 12
B6. Combination of B1-B5 12 16 20 18 15 16 18 20 19 19 17
C. Tailored Tests
C1. Combined contingent liabilities 12 14 15 14 12 12 14 15 14 14 13
C2. Natural disaster 12 14 16 14 12 13 15 15 15 15 14
C3. Commodity price 12 14 15 13 11 12 14 14 14 14 13
C4. Market Financing 12 14 16 14 13 17 20 17 15 14 13
Threshold 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15
C. Tailored Tests
C1. Combined contingent liabilities 18 22 23 20 17 17 19 19 18 18 16
C2. Natural disaster 18 22 23 20 17 18 19 19 18 18 16
C3. Commodity price 18 24 24 20 17 18 19 19 18 18 16
C4. Market Financing 18 22 24 21 18 24 27 22 19 17 15
Threshold 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18
Table 4. Côte d’Ivoire: Sensitivity Analysis for Key Indicators of Public Debt, 2023–33
(Percent)
Projections 1/
2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033
PV of Debt-to-GDP Ratio
Baseline 53 52 51 50 49 48 46 44 42 40 38
A. Alternative Scenarios
A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2023-2033 2/ 53 53 53 52 52 51 51 50 49 49 48
0 #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A #N/A
B. Bound Tests
B1. Real GDP growth 53 55 57 57 57 56 56 55 53 52 51
B2. Primary balance 53 54 56 55 53 52 50 48 46 43 42
B3. Exports 53 57 62 61 59 58 56 53 50 47 45
B4. Other flows 3/ 53 53 53 51 50 49 47 45 43 41 39
B5. Depreciation 53 59 56 53 50 48 45 41 38 35 32
B6. Combination of B1-B5 53 52 53 52 50 48 47 44 42 40 38
C. Tailored Tests
C1. Combined contingent liabilities 53 60 58 57 55 54 52 50 47 45 43
C2. Natural disaster 53 62 60 59 57 56 55 52 50 48 46
C3. Commodity price 53 55 56 57 58 59 58 57 56 54 53
C4. Market Financing 53 55 55 54 52 51 49 47 44 42 40
PV of Debt-to-Revenue Ratio
Baseline 321 314 299 282 270 261 247 234 222 211 202
A. Alternative Scenarios
A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2023-2033 2/ 321 315 306 294 286 280 272 266 263 259 256
0 42 39 29 21 17 14 15 14 14 14 12
B. Bound Tests
B1. Real GDP growth 321 329 332 320 313 309 300 290 283 276 271
B2. Primary balance 321 322 327 307 294 284 269 254 242 230 220
B3. Exports 321 339 363 342 327 316 299 282 266 250 236
B4. Other flows 3/ 321 317 306 289 276 267 253 239 227 215 205
B5. Depreciation 321 353 326 299 278 262 241 221 203 187 172
B6. Combination of B1-B5 321 309 309 290 276 265 250 235 222 210 199
C. Tailored Tests
C1. Combined contingent liabilities 321 358 338 319 304 294 279 264 251 239 229
C2. Natural disaster 321 369 350 331 317 308 293 278 267 255 245
C3. Commodity price 321 353 351 346 338 332 318 303 295 288 283
C4. Market Financing 321 332 320 302 290 280 264 248 235 222 212
Baseline 42 49 46 37 32 28 28 26 24 23 21
A. Alternative Scenarios
A1. Key variables at their historical averages in 2023-2033 2/ 42 49 46 40 35 33 33 31 32 32 31
0 42 39 29 21 17 14 15 14 14 14 12
B. Bound Tests
B1. Real GDP growth 42 51 51 43 39 36 36 34 33 32 31
B2. Primary balance 42 49 50 45 36 31 31 28 27 26 24
B3. Exports 42 49 47 39 34 30 30 29 29 28 25
B4. Other flows 3/ 42 49 46 37 32 29 29 26 25 24 21
B5. Depreciation 42 49 51 41 35 32 33 30 28 27 24
B6. Combination of B1-B5 42 48 46 42 33 29 29 26 24 23 21
C. Tailored Tests
C1. Combined contingent liabilities 42 49 65 45 36 31 31 28 26 25 22
C2. Natural disaster 42 50 68 47 38 33 32 30 28 27 24
C3. Commodity price 42 53 55 49 44 40 39 36 34 34 32
C4. Market Financing 42 49 48 39 34 36 37 30 26 24 21
Table 5. Côte d’Ivoire: Decomposition of Public Debt Stock and Debt Service by Creditors,
Debt Stock (end of period) Debt Service
Debt2022-25 1/
Stock (end of period) Debt Service
Debt Stock 2022
(end of period) 2023 2024Debt
2025
Service 2023 2024 2025
Stock 2022 2023 2024Debt 2025Service 2023 2024 2025
(In US$ billions)Debt (Percent (end
total of period)
debt) (Percent GDP) (In
2023 US$ billions)
2024 2025 (Percent
2023 2024GDP) 2025
(In US$ billions) (Percent2022 total debt) (Percent GDP)
2022 (In
2023US$ billions)
2024 2025 (Percent
2023 2024 GDP) 2025
Total (In US$ billions) 40.0 (Percent total debt) 100.0 (Percent GDP) 56.7 (In 4.5
US$ billions)5.5 5.9 (Percent
6.2 GDP) 6.8
7.0
Total (In US$ billions) 40.0 (Percent total debt) 100.0 (Percent GDP) 56.7 (In 4.5
US$ billions)5.5 5.9 (Percent
6.2 GDP) 6.8
7.0
External
Total 24.3
40.0 60.8
100.0 34.5
56.7 1.6
4.5 2.2
5.5 2.9
5.9 2.2
6.2 2.8
7.0 3.4
6.8
External
Total 2,3
24.3
40.0 60.8
100.0 34.5
56.7 1.6
4.5 2.2
5.5 2.9
5.9 2.2
6.2 2.8
7.0 3.4
6.8
Multilateral creditors 2,3
External 7.2
24.3 18.0
60.8 10.2
34.5 0.4
1.6 0.6
2.2 0.8
2.9 0.5
2.2 0.7
2.8 0.9
3.4
Multilateral creditors
External 7.2
24.3 18.0
60.8 10.2
34.5 0.4
1.6 0.6
2.2 0.8
2.9 0.5
2.2 0.7
2.8 0.9
3.4
IMF
Multilateral creditors2,3 2.0
7.2 5.0
18.0 2.9
10.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 0.5 0.7 0.9
IMF
Multilateral creditors2,3 2.0
7.2 5.0
18.0 2.9
10.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 0.5 0.7 0.9
World
IMF Bank 2.8
2.0 7.1
5.0 4.0
2.9
World
IMF Bank 2.8
2.0 7.1
5.0 4.0
2.9
AfDB
World Bank 1.0
2.8 2.5
7.1 1.4
4.0
AfDB
World Bank 1.0
2.8 2.5
7.1 1.4
4.0
Other
AfDB Multilaterals 1.3
1.0 3.4
2.5 1.9
1.4
Other
AfDB Multilaterals 1.3
1.0 3.4
2.5 1.9
1.4
o/w: IDB
Other Multilaterals 0.7
1.3 1.7
3.4 1.0
1.9
o/w: IDB
Other Multilaterals 0.7
1.3 1.7
3.4 1.0
1.9
o/w:
o/w: BOAD
IDB 0.4
0.7 0.9
1.7 0.5
1.0
o/w:
o/w: BOAD
IDB 0.4
0.7 0.9
1.7 0.5
1.0
o/w:Others
BOAD 0.3
0.4 0.8
0.9 0.4
0.5
o/w:Others
BOAD 2
0.3
0.4 0.8
0.9 0.4
0.5
BilateralOthers
Creditors 2 4.1
0.3 10.2
0.8 5.8
0.4 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.3
BilateralOthers
Creditors 4.1
0.3 10.2
0.8 5.8
0.4 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.3
Paris Club
Bilateral Creditors 2 2 1.1
4.1 2.8
10.2 1.6
5.8 0.0
0.1 0.0
0.2 0.1
0.3 0.0
0.2 0.1
0.2 0.1
0.3
Paris Club
Bilateral Creditors 1.1
4.1 2.8
10.2 1.6
5.8 0.0
0.1 0.0
0.2 0.1
0.3 0.0
0.2 0.1
0.2 0.1
0.3
o/w:
Paris France 0.6 1.6 0.9
o/w:Club
Paris France
Club
1.1
0.6
1.1
2.8
1.6
2.8
1.6
0.9
1.6
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
o/w:
o/w: Germany
France 0.3
0.6 0.8
1.6 0.5
0.9
o/w:
o/w: Germany
France 0.3
0.6 0.8
1.6 0.5
0.9
o/w:Others
Germany 0.2
0.3 0.5
0.8 0.3
0.5
o/w:Others
Germany 0.2
0.3 0.5
0.8 0.3
0.5
Non-ParisOthers Club 2.9
0.2 7.4
0.5 4.2
0.3 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
Non-Paris
Others Club 2.9
0.2 7.4
0.5 4.2
0.3 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
o/w:
Non-Paris China Club 2.7
2.9 6.8
7.4 3.9
4.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
o/w: China
Non-Paris Club 2.7
2.9 6.8
7.4 3.9
4.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3
o/w:
o/w: India
China 0.2
2.7 0.4
6.8 0.2
3.9
o/w:
o/w: India
China 0.2
2.7 0.4
6.8 0.2
3.9
o/w:Others
India 0.1
0.2 0.1
0.4 0.1
0.2
o/w:Others
India 0.1
0.2 0.1
0.4 0.1
0.2
Bonds Others 8.5
0.1 21.4
0.1 12.1
0.1 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.7 0.8
Bonds Others 8.5
0.1 21.4
0.1 12.1
0.1 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.7 0.8
Commercial
Bonds creditors 4.5
8.5 11.3
21.4 6.4
12.1 0.5
0.5 0.9
0.6 1.2
0.7 0.7
0.8 1.1
0.7 1.4
0.8
Commercial
Bonds creditors 4.5
8.5 11.3
21.4 6.4
12.1 0.5
0.5 0.9
0.6 1.2
0.7 0.7
0.8 1.1
0.7 1.4
0.8
o/w: MUFG
Commercial creditors 0.6
4.5 1.5
11.3 0.9
6.4 0.5 0.9 1.2 0.7 1.1 1.4
o/w: MUFG
Commercial creditors 0.6
4.5 1.5
11.3 0.9
6.4 0.5 0.9 1.2 0.7 1.1 1.4
o/w:
o/w: SGF
MUFG 0.6
0.6 1.5
1.5 0.8
0.9
o/w:
o/w: SGFMUFG 0.6
0.6 1.5
1.5 0.8
0.9
o/w:Others
SGF 3.3
0.6 8.3
1.5 4.7
0.8
o/w:Others
SGF 3.3
0.6 8.3
1.5 4.7
0.8
Domestic Others 15.7
3.3 39.2
8.3 22.2
4.7 2.9 3.3 3.0 4.0 4.2 3.4
Domestic Others 15.7
3.3 39.2
8.3 22.2
4.7 2.9 3.3 3.0 4.0 4.2 3.4
Held by residents, total
Domestic n/a
15.7 n/a
39.2 n/a
22.2 2.9 3.3 3.0 4.0 4.2 3.4
Held by residents, total
Domestic n/a
15.7 n/a
39.2 n/a
22.2 2.9 3.3 3.0 4.0 4.2 3.4
Held
Held by
by non-residents,
residents, total total n/a
n/a n/a
n/a n/a
n/a
Held
Held by by non-residents,
residents, total total n/a
n/a n/a
n/a n/a
n/a
T-Bills
Held by non-residents, total 0.4
n/a 1.0
n/a 0.6
n/a 0.6 0.4 0.0 0.8 0.5 0.0
T-Bills
Held by non-residents, total 0.4
n/a 1.0
n/a 0.6
n/a 0.6 0.4 0.0 0.8 0.5 0.0
Bonds
T-Bills 3.9
0.4 9.8
1.0 5.6
0.6 0.9
0.6 1.1
0.4 1.0
0.0 1.3
0.8 1.4
0.5 1.1
0.0
Bonds
T-Bills 3.9
0.4 9.8
1.0 5.6
0.6 0.9
0.6 1.1
0.4 1.0
0.0 1.3
0.8 1.4
0.5 1.1
0.0
Loans,
Bonds and others 11.4
3.9 28.4
9.8 16.1
5.6 1.4
0.9 1.8
1.1 2.0
1.0 1.9
1.3 2.3
1.4 2.3
1.1
Loans,
Bonds and others 11.4
3.9 28.4
9.8 16.1
5.6 1.4
0.9 1.8
1.1 2.0
1.0 1.9
1.3 2.3
1.4 2.3
1.1
MemoLoans, Items:
and others 11.4 28.4 16.1 1.4 1.8 2.0 1.9 2.3 2.3
MemoLoans, Items:
and others4 11.4 28.4 16.1 1.4 1.8 2.0 1.9 2.3 2.3
Collateralized
Memo Items: debt 4 n/a n/a n/a
Collateralized
Memo Items: debt4 5 n/a n/a n/a
Contingent
Collateralized liabilities
debt 4 5 n/a n/a n/a
Contingent
Collateralized liabilities
debt n/a n/a n/a
Nominal
Contingent GDP liabilities55 70.2
n/a n/a n/a
Nominal
Contingent GDP liabilities 70.2
n/a n/a n/a
Nominal GDP 70.2
Nominal GDP 70.2
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff calculations.
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff calculations.
Sources: Ivorian
Sources: Ivorian authorities
authorities andand IMF IMFstaff
staffcalculations.
calculations.
Sources: Ivorian authorities and IMF staff calculations.
1/As reported by Country authorities according to their classification of creditors, including by official and commercial. Debt coverage is the same as the DSA, exce pt for
1/As reported by Country authorities according to their classification of creditors, including by official and commercial. Debt coverage is the same as the DSA, exce pt for
guaranteed
1/As reported debt.
by Country authorities according to their classification of creditors, including by official and commercial. Debt coverage is the same as the DSA, exce pt for
guaranteed
1/As reported debt.by Country authorities according to their classification of creditors, including by official and commercial. Debt coverage is the same as the DSA, exce pt for
2/Some
guaranteed publicdebt.debt is not shown in the table due to limited availability of information. This includes non-guaranteed SOE debt and local government debt.
2/Some
guaranteed publicdebt. debt is not shown in the table due to limited availability of information. This includes non-guaranteed SOE debt and local government debt.
3/Multilateral
2/Some public creditors”
debt is not areshown
simplyininstitutions
the table due withtomore
limitedthan one official
availability shareholder and
of information. may not necessarily align with
SOE creditor classification under other IMF policies
3/Multilateral
2/Some public creditors”
debt is notareshown
simplyininstitutions
the table due withtomorelimitedthan one official
availability shareholder This
of information. and includes
Thismayincludes
non-guaranteed
not necessarily
non-guaranteed align with debt and
SOE creditor
debt and
local government
classification under debt.
local government other
debt. IMF policies
(e.g. Lending Into
3/Multilateral Arrears).
creditors” are simply institutions with more than one official shareholder and may not necessarily align with creditor classification under other IMF policies
(e.g. Lending Into
3/Multilateral Arrears).
creditors” are simply institutions with more than one official shareholder and may not necessarily align with creditor classification under other IMF policies
4/Debt is collateralized
(e.g. Lending Into Arrears).when the creditor has rights over an asset or revenue stream that would allow it, if the borrower defaults on its payment obligations, to rely on
4/Debt is collateralized
(e.g. Lending Into Arrears).when the creditor has rights over an asset or revenue stream that would allow it, if the borrower defaults on its payment obligations, to rely on
the
4/Debtasset is or revenue stream
collateralized whento secure
the repayment
creditor has rights of over
the debt.
an assetCollateralization
or revenue stream entailsthat
a borrower granting
would allow liensborrower
it, if the over specific existing
defaults on itsassets or future
payment receivables
obligations, to on
to rely a
the
4/Debtasset or revenue stream to secure repayment of over
the debt. Collateralization entailsthat
a borrower granting liensborrower
over specific existing itsassets or future receivables to ona
lender
the assetasisor
collateralized
security
revenue against when
stream to
the
repayment creditor
secure thehas
ofrepayment rights
loan. Collateral
of the
anisasset
debt.
or revenue
“unrelated” whenstream
Collateralization it has no
entails a
would allow
relationship
borrower toit,aifproject
granting
the
liens financed
over
defaults
the on
byexisting
specific loan. payment
An
assets example
or
obligations,
futurewould be to
receivables
rely
borrowing
to a
lender
the assetas or
security
revenue against
stream repayment
to secure ofrepayment
the loan. Collateral
of the debt. is “unrelated” whenentails
Collateralization it has no
a relationship
borrower to a project
granting liens financed
over byexisting
specific the loan. An example
assets or futurewould be borrowing
receivables to a
to finance
lender the budget
as security deficit,
against collateralized
repayment of the by oil Collateral
loan. revenue receipts. See the
is “unrelated” jointitIMF-World
when Bank notetofor
has no relationship the G20financed
a project “Collateralized
by the loan.Transactions:
An example Key would
Considerations
be borrowing for
to finance
lender the budget
as security deficit, collateralized
of the by oil Collateral
revenue receipts. See the jointitIMF-World Bank notetofor the G20financed
“Collateralized Transactions: Key would
Considerations for
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to financeLenders
the andagainst
budgetBorrowers”repayment
deficit, for a discussion
collateralized by
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of revenue
oil issues raised is “unrelated”
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receipts. See the
when
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has no relationship
IMF-World Bank note for
a project
the G20
by the loan.
“Collateralized
An example
Transactions: Key
be borrowing
Considerations for
Public
to financeLenders and Borrowers”
the budget for a discussion
deficit, collateralized of revenue
by oil issues raised by collateral.
receipts. See the joint IMF-World Bank note for the G20 “Collateralized Transactions: Key Considerations for
5/Includes
Public Lenders other-one off guarantees
and Borrowers” not included
for a discussion in publicly
of issues raisedguaranteed
by collateral.debt (e.g. credit lines) and other explicit contingent liabilities not elsewhere classified (e.g.
5/Includes
Public Lenders other-one off guarantees
and Borrowers” not included
for a discussion in publicly
of issues raisedguaranteed debt (e.g. credit lines) and other explicit contingent liabilities not elsewhere classified (e.g.
by collateral.
potential
5/Includes legal claims, off
other-one payments
guarantees resulting
not from PPPinarrangements).
included publicly guaranteed debt (e.g. credit lines) and other explicit contingent liabilities not elsewhere classified (e.g.
potential
5/Includeslegal claims, off
other-one payments
guarantees resulting from PPPinarrangements).
not included publicly guaranteed debt (e.g. credit lines) and other explicit contingent liabilities not elsewhere classified (e.g.
potential legal claims, payments resulting from PPP arrangements).
potential legal claims, payments resulting from PPP arrangements).
1. Despite its low contributions to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, Côte d’Ivoire
stands to be severely affected by climate change. GHG emissions are lower than the sub-
Saharan average (SSA), which is estimated at 3.3 tCO2e per capita, and Côte d’Ivoire’s share
of total global CO2 emissions is very small at 0.1 percent. CO2 emissions represented
70 percent of total GHG emissions in 2019. The Agriculture, Forestry and Other Land Use
(AFOLU) sector is the single most important contributor to GHG emissions, amounting to
62 percent. The energy sector, on the other hand, is responsible for 25 percent of total
emissions, a per-capita rate of 0.51 tons of CO2e. While GHG emissions are expected to
increase as the country develops, and mitigation measures should be considered in order to
avoid carbon lock-ins, Côte d’Ivoire’s main challenge is its vulnerability to climatic shocks.
The country ranks 140 out of 181 countries for extreme climate vulnerability (181 being the
most vulnerable).1 Climate change is therefore set to have a significant impact on the most
vulnerable population and key economic sectors in the coming decades.
2. The impacts of climate change are already visible and are expected to worsen
over time with increased temperatures, greater weather variability, and more extreme
weather events.2 Under a 2.7°C global warming scenario (i.e., under current policies),
temperatures are expected to increase by 1 and 4°C in northern areas and 1 and 3°C in the
south, with northern areas experiencing greater extremes. Future dry and wet periods are
likely to become more extreme, and more droughts and a higher risk of floods are expected.
1See ND-GAIN Country Index (University of Notre Dame Global Adaptation Index) (dashboard), University of
Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, https://gain.nd.edu/our-work/country-index/.
2
World Bank CIV Country Climate and Development Report (2023). The report uses the World Bank guidance
for the selection of global climate scenarios for CCDR analyses. These include SSP2-4.5, SSP3-7.0 for
adaptation; and SSP3-7.0 GCMs and SSP1-1.9 GCMs for mitigation.
CÔTE D’IVOIRE
The sea level is estimated to rise by up to 30 cm by 2050.3,4 Droughts are perhaps the most visible
climate change effects and are expected to increasingly impact the semi-arid northern savannah
region of the country, exacerbating food insecurity, impacts to livelihoods, and leading to GDP
growth losses. More than 10 percent of Côte d'Ivoire's land was degraded between 2000 and 2010,
and the rate of degradation has subsequently accelerated.5
3. Climate change’s impact is magnified by high levels of poverty and inequality. Climate
change impacts are asymmetric: poor households are generally more exposed to air, water, and soil
pollution and to rising temperatures, uneven rainfall, and other extreme weather events. In addition,
poor households rely on low-quality public health services and have fewer financial resources to
cope with damage. High exposure to shocks poses serious challenges for poverty reduction, with
negative spillover effects on the labor productivity and well-being of households. Increasing
temperatures and floods will also have an impact on the spread of infectious diseases, such as
malaria. Social safety nets are still nascent in Côte d’Ivoire and do not yet account for the climate
dimension, while most of the health and education infrastructure is vulnerable to climatic shocks.
4. The destruction and degradation of the country’s remaining forests will continue to
fuel ecosystem degradation and reduce resilience to climate change impacts. The annual rate
of deforestation averaged 2.8 percent in 1990-2020, the highest in the world.6 Côte d’Ivoire could
lose all its forests by 2034 if no transformational action is taken. The loss of forest cover has led to
biodiversity loss, reduced capacity to absorb carbon emissions, reduced capacity for resilience, and
wide-ranging landscape changes. Soil degradation and local climate change following deforestation
is causing cocoa production to decline and to shift to the center-west and eventually to the south-
west where forest cover remains. With no action, climate change could cut cocoa production by half
of current production.
5. Adapting to climate change requires a resilient growth model. Many sectors relevant to
climate action (such as agriculture, disaster-risk management, energy, human health, social
protection, transport, tourism, urban planning, water, and sanitation) are also critical for growth. The
negative impact7 could be large if no action is taken. Without any additional adaptation effort,
modelling estimates that average annual GDP losses will increase over time and could reach up to
13 percent of GDP by 2050 and 1.63 million people would be prevented from escaping poverty.
Adaptation measures are costly, but they can potentially offset significant parts of negative climate
impact, particularly on the poor. Key economic sectors, including cocoa and energy, are at risk of
3 Doherty,A., Amies, J., Mayhew, L., Higazi, A., Osborne, R., Griffith, H. and Buonomo, E., 2022. Climate Risk Report for
the West Africa region. Met Office, ODI, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
4Note that potential catastrophic impacts and tipping points that are not easily captured through existing estimates
may pose the biggest future threats.
5Ministère de la Salubrité de l’Environnement et du Développement Durable, 2017. Engagement de la Côte d’Ivoire
de mettre en œuvre la Neutralité en matière de Dégradation des Terres.
6 World Bank, 2022. République de Côte d’Ivoire Note Politique Forestière. © World Bank.
7 Estimates are from World Bank Côte d’Ivoire’s Country Climate and Development Report (November 2023).
underperforming if action is not taken today to address climate impacts and leverage technological
or regulatory developments.
6. Côte d’Ivoire has established its climate change commitments and strategic objectives.
Côte d’Ivoire has an ambitious climate agenda. Its Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) seeks
to achieve significant adaptation action in agriculture and livestock, forests, water resources, coastal
zones, and human health. It includes priority sectors for mitigation such as energy, waste,
agriculture, and forestry. Implementation of the NDC until 2030 is estimated to cost US$22 billion,
which represents 17 percent of 2030 GDP or assuming an equal distribution across the next decade,
an annual average cost of about 2 percent of GDP.
7. Côte d’Ivoire has recently adopted a revised National Disaster Risk Reduction Strategy
2020-2030. The strategy aims to (i) strengthen the legislative and regulatory environment for
disaster risk reduction, (ii) strengthen the technical capacity of institutions at both the national and
local level, and (iii) use innovative and sustainable financing mechanisms for disaster risk reduction.
But the track record has been poor. The new strategy follows the previous National Disaster Risk
Reduction Strategy for 2015-2020, which has largely not been implemented because of weak
capacity and lack of coordination. Similarly, a National Platform for Risk Reduction and Disaster
Management was created in 2011, but the committee in charge of the platform has never convened.
The country also has yet to operationalize a national early warning system. While it has established a
legal framework for urban planning, the process remains largely centralized and does not
adequately address climate adaptation and resilience to disaster risks. As part of the new reform
package to support the implementation of the strategy, authorities are planning to include climate
into key aspects of Public Financial Management (PFM), strengthening governance, creating a
framework for green and sustainable financing, among others.
8. The adaptation and resilience assessment carried out in the Country Climate and
Development Report shows however that Côte d’Ivoire has much to do to meet its adaptation
ambitions, and to strengthen adaptation and resilience capacities at the national and local levels.
Côte d’Ivoire performs primarily in the “nascent” and “emerging” stages of managing adaptation
and resilience across all pillars of the diagnostic. Institutional reforms are planned to reinforce the
policy coordination mechanisms, including through the adoption of a Climate Change Law, and
reinforce capacity, including through World Bank-led TA on macroeconomic and climate modelling
in the first half of 2024.
9. Despite its low contribution to GHG emissions, Côte d’Ivoire has established strong
commitments. On the mitigation side, while contributing only 0.1 percent of global emissions,
Côte d’Ivoire has committed to carbon neutrality by 2030 but only if it receives the external support
it needs to achieve this goal. With conditional support, Côte d’Ivoire commits to reducing GHG
emissions by 98.95 percent compared with a business-as-usual (BAU) scenario by 2030 by dramatic
emissions reductions in the forestry and land-use sector.
11. The government has responded ambitiously to reverse the trends of deforestation and
forest degradation with its Forest Preservation, Rehabilitation, and Extension Strategy (SPREF,
2018). Côte d’Ivoire’s ambition is to generate a transformational change in the management of
forests and to increase forest cover from 11 percent to 20 percent by 2040. A new Forest Code was
adopted in 2019 to promote and develop agroforestry and to strengthen protections for existing
natural forests. It has also begun to reform and implement land tenure policies to reduce the
uncertainties and poor logging management that hamper sustainable forest management.8 The
government has also prepared a jurisdictional Emissions Reduction Program9 targeting the most
densely forested area pressured by deforestation and forest degradation due to cocoa production in
the five regions around the Taï National Park in the southwest of the country. It is one of the only
remaining intact dense rainforests in West Africa. Finally, Côte d’Ivoire has made some progress in
addressing the role of cocoa in deforestation and in catalyzing private-sector commitments.
12. The government has identified key needed investments to support the energy
transition and reverse deforestation. Related to the former, it includes an estimated needed
investment of an additional 250 MW capacity of renewable energy. Related to the latter, it includes
the development of the sustainable cocoa traceability system, the implementation of the SPREF
8387 ‘’Forest Exploitation Perimeters” have been allocated to private loggers in the Rural Land Domain without the
active enforcement of sustainable forest management regulations.
9 AnEmission Reductions Payment (ERP) was negotiated with the Carbon Fund Donors in 2019, for US$50M carbon
credits to FCPF donors with a purchase option for an additional US$30M under implementation with a first payment
expected by the end of 2023. ERP Document:
https://www.forestcarbonpartnership.org/system/files/documents/190422-ERPD%20RCI%20FV.pdf.
through the protection of heavily degraded forests, the development of agro-forestry and
increasing private sector participation in the forestry sector, among others.
D. Financial Challenges
13. Côte d’Ivoire’s climate transition hinges upon accelerating the funding and financing
for climate- smart investment. The CCDR estimates that additional investment needs10 to curb
future climate impact in the strictest sense would amount to at least 0.2 to 0.4 percent of GDP per
year between 2023 and 2050. The necessary investment needs to be implemented early on, to lower
the country’s vulnerability. Given intrinsic interlinkages between investment for development and
climate resilience, the overall investment needs associated with climate resilient growth will be
higher. First, the adoption of strict additionality to define climate change adaptation needs excludes
the cost of closing the gap to achieve an optimal level of adaptation to current climate conditions.
Second, adaptation costs can be hard to separate from other development needs when growth,
structural transformation and adaptation are mutually-reinforcing. As such, investing in climate
adaptation is not necessarily distinct from the investment needs identified under the PND or the
NDC. The NDC estimated that until 2030 the investment needs amounted to US$22 billion, half of
which would need to be financed by the private sector, but overall representing about 17 percent of
2030 GDP, or assuming an annual average cost of about 2 percent of GDP over the next decade.
14. Overall, private-sector equity and debt will need to step up given public resource
constraints. In the context of tightening financial conditions and heightened borrowing costs, a
significant share of this cost – particularly in the short- and medium-term – will need to be financed
by the private sector. Climate funds are also limited: according to the Climate Funds Update
database,11 Côte d’Ivoire had received only US$100.7 million from multilateral climate change funds
as of January 2022. To reach the amount needed, it will be critical to identify synergies between
fiscal policy and climate objectives (mitigation/adaptation), to tap into sovereign green debt
instruments on the public side, and to scale green capital markets and private investments.
Furthermore, to reduce these costs, the government could adopt structural reforms to improve the
efficiency of public spending and incentivize private-sector investment in green and climate-smart
projects. Reinforcing inter-sectoral, cross-sectoral, and institutional capacity will ensure these
objectives are met. In this direction, Côte d’Ivoire is developing a robust public investment
management (PIM) and PFM frameworks for integration of climate considerations.
10 For the purpose of the CCDR, we defined financing needs according to a strict additionality definition, that is, the
difference between optimal investment levels with and without climatic shocks. This implies that many investments
already planned or included in government plans for economic development are not included in this stricter
definition.
11Overseas Development Institute and Heinrich Boll Stiftung Washington, D.C. 2023. Climate Funds Update © ODI
and HBF, London and Washington, D.C. https://climatefundsupdate.org/about-climate-finance/
• Active operations that have high climate co-benefits include: the Cashew Value Chain
Competitiveness Project (US$200 million, P158810) that aims to increase cashew
productivity, quality and added value, benefiting smallholder farmers and the cashew
processing industry; the E-Agriculture Project (US$70 million, P160418) that aims to increase
access to digital services and farmer's access to markets through digital platforms and roads,
and mitigate the impact of external shocks on the agriculture sector; the Water Security and
Sanitation Support Project in preparation (US$250 million, P177118) that will strengthen the
management of water resources and increase access to improved drinking water and
sanitation services in selected regions. In urban areas, resilience to flooding and other
climatic hazards is being supported through the Urban Resilience and Solid Waste
Management Project (US$315 million, P168308), the Sustainable and Inclusive Secondary
Cities Project (US$300 million, P177062) and the Abidjan Urban Mobility (US$300 million,
P167401). Finally, the Forest Investment Project Phase 2 (US$140 million, P175982) supports
the conservation and increase of the forest stock and improves access to sources of income
from sustainable forest management for selected communities in target zones. In the energy
sector the National Electricity Digitalization and Access Operation (US$300 million, P176776)
increases access to electricity and improves the quality of electricity service, in the lagging
region; and enhances institutional capacity to support the electrification programs in the
country. The project also supports the deployment of renewable energy sources. See below
on the DPF series.
• Operations under preparation are strongly aligned with the CCDR priority areas aiming
to strengthen climate resilience across key economic sectors, human capital
development and infrastructure.
• Analysis and technical assistance. The CCDR provides a strong knowledge base to support
the country engagement on climate change across all sectors. The Bank also provides
technical assistance, through TA components of projects and TA financed by the Climate
Support Facility trust fund, to support the implementation of the NDCs, including the
development of the MRV system, the strengthening of the DRM framework, and the
operationalization of the CCDR findings.
16. The World Bank First, Second and Third Investment for Growth Development
Policy Financing (DPF) series support policy and institutional reforms that strengthen
climate resilience and adaptation and advance a low-carbon development pathway. The
DPF series is strongly aligned with the policy recommendations of the CCDR and aims at
strengthening the sustainable use of natural resources. It does so by improving the
environmental institutional framework, creating the regulatory instruments to reduce coastal
erosion, and most importantly supporting the sustainable cocoa traceability system and the
legal instruments to reverse deforestation.
17. The proposed RSF for Côte d’Ivoire contributes to the operationalization of the
CCDR recommendations, along with other WB engagement. The reform measures envisaged
under the RSF program have been identified in close coordination with WB staff. They have
been identified in the CCDR as critical reforms to pursue a resilient development. They build on
and complement the extensive WB engagement as described above.
I. INTRODUCTION
These positive developments paved the way for an upgrade of Côte d’Ivoire’s sovereign
debt rating, and a successful Eurobond issuance on January 23, 2024. Côte d’Ivoire’s
issuance is an important milestone, as it is one of the first Sub-Saharan African countries to
successfully tap international capital markets post-COVID. This is achieved amidst still adverse
external financing conditions. The issuance, which attracted both existing and new investors, is
a testimony of market confidence in the country’s prospects.
Despite these positive prospects, Côte d’Ivoire remains vulnerable to climate change.
Climate events put at risk the livelihood of a significant share of the population. Indeed,
agriculture contributes about 17 percent of GDP and 10 percent of tax revenue, employs more
than 50 percent of the population and is uniquely vulnerable to extreme weather events
including drought, decreased rainfall, and deforestation. In addition, the country’s coast is
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exposed to erosion which threatens the largest cities. Moreover, economic vulnerabilities to
climate change stem from the importance of the agriculture sector and the high share of
industrial and services activity located in coastal areas.
The authorities are acutely aware that without forceful reforms, climate change would
prevent them from achieving their macro- and socio-economic objectives, including the
goal of doubling per capita income and transitioning Côte d’Ivoire towards an upper
middle-income country by 2030. Against this backdrop, the authorities have taken proactive
steps to address the existential threat of climate change. They strengthened the legal framework
and adopted ambitious commitments under international agreements. These include notably the
Paris climate agreements and the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
(UNCCD)’s Abidjan legacy program. In line with the international agreements, they developed
their Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) and National Adaptation Plans (NAP).
The RSF program is built along six pillars balancing adaptation and mitigation efforts:
Pillar I. Integrating Climate into the Public Financial and Investment Management
As assessed by Staff, Côte d’Ivoire has built robust public financial management, including
through Fund supported reforms and technical assistance. Building on the gains made, the
authorities are resolved to mainstream climate into the public financial and investment
management processes. In this regard, they plan to leverage the IMF’s green PFM and C-PIMA
technical assistance recommendations.
The government will also prepare the required legislations and regulations to ensure that
climate-related risks are reflected into the budget law’s risks statement. They will make it
mandatory to include climate considerations into the appraisal and selection of public
investment projects, notably through the environmental impact assessments of all projects, with
the view to promoting low-carbon climate-resilient investments.
Implementation of the authorities’ climate policies needs to reduce the fragmentation of the
regulations and the agencies involved and to enhance further coordination. To strengthen further
policy coordination, the authorities plan to adopt a comprehensive legislation on climate
change, and establish coordinating bodies, including a National Commission to Combat Climate
Change under the Prime Minister’s leadership, a National Climate Authority, and a scientific
board of overseers. A dedicated fund for mobilizing green finance will also be put in place. The
National Commission will produce an annual report on progress made in meeting the country’s
pledges and include recommendations to improve climate action.
The authorities’ goal is to build the financial resilience of farmers which will enable them to
invest in more resistant farming, including by building capacity, and through irrigation systems
or crop diversification. Building on the West African Development Bank’s (BOAD) project to
support a farmers’ insurance scheme, the authorities will put in place an enabling legal and
regulatory framework for the private sector’s participation in climate-related insurance
coverage. One focus area at the pilot stage would be the cotton sector, given its economic
importance and unique vulnerability.
As mentioned above, Côte d’Ivoire successfully issued an ESG-linked Eurobond in the amount
of $2.6 billion dollars, marking an important milestone after two years of adverse external
financing conditions. The authorities will intensify efforts to mobilize private sector’s financing
for their adaptation and mitigation reforms, and to make Côte d’Ivoire a hub for climate finance
in West Africa. Estimated at $22 billion over 8 years, the implementation costs of the policies
are balanced between adaptation, which accounts for $12 billion, and the $10 billion mitigation
costs estimates. In addition to the government’s own contribution, the participation of the
private sector and international and bilateral partners will be needed.
taxonomy reference framework for public and private sector climate investments will be
adopted. Based on this framework, the authorities will introduce a climate risk disclosure
framework connected to the taxonomy for state-owned enterprises and non-financial private
companies.
Furthermore, the authorities will operationalize a green finance platform by: (1) setting up a
finance website portal, where domestic and international climate finance actors can find key
information on the principal pillars of the relevant strategies and partnerships notably with
Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) and other international development institutions; and
(2) designing and implementing a training and capacity development plan for national actors on
climate financing instruments, climate-related taxonomies, and climate risk disclosure
frameworks.
The authorities will comprehensively address the challenges of extreme weather events,
focusing initially on the vulnerability to flooding and coastal erosion. Nationwide early warning
systems will continue to be developed to respond rapidly and mitigate the impact of extreme
weather events. A pilot phase will be implemented in the Adzopé department. The authorities
will also take steps to buttress the resilience of the critical road infrastructure, starting with the
greater Abidjan area.
Côte d’Ivoire made the pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent by 2030. To
support this ambitious goal, transformative reforms and initiatives are envisioned, including
steps to i) strengthen the control of greenhouse gas emissions in the key transport and energy
sectors; and ii) develop carbon credits initiatives and a strategy for carbon taxation.
In the energy sector, the authorities will strive to incentivize energy efficiency and increase to
45 per cent the share of renewables in the energy production mix by 2030. In the transport
sector, the authorities will promote e-mobility, including with the installation of electric cars
charging stations, technical inspections of electric vehicles, insurance for electric vehicles, and
the streamlining of the vehicles tax system, with the goal of transitioning towards lower-
emission vehicles.
On carbon taxation, the authorities will first seek to draw on the experience from peers and
Fund technical assistance to inform their carbon taxation strategy, given that most carbon
taxation initiatives across the world are at an early stage of conception. From these inputs, they
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will design a carbon taxation system which is tailored to the country’s needs while seeking to
protect vulnerable households from excessive fuel price volatility.
The authorities welcome the conclusion of Staff’s Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA) that
Côte d’Ivoire’s overall and external public debt will remain sustainable with a moderate risk of
debt distress under the RSF arrangement. The authorities are confident that their Medium-Term
Revenue Strategy (MTRS) under finalization will substantially improve the external debt
service-to-revenue indicator and hence the overall debt profile.
IV. CONCLUSION
Côte d’Ivoire’s authorities are taking forceful and proactive steps to build the economy’s
resilience to climate change. Their RSF program will be one of the soundest to date, and the
access level requested is commensurate with the strength of this program. These reflect the
authorities’ forward-leaning vision and their robust climate reform package. Implementation
capacity will lean on their established track record of policymaking and reforms, and supported
by well-targeted capacity development across relevant Government agencies which the
authorities call for. In addition, the Fund’s catalytic role in helping the authorities garner
additional financing will be instrumental for the implementation of climate adaptation and
mitigation policies and the success of the RSF program.
In view of the authorities’ commitment to address the impact of climate change and the
expected positive spillovers from this RSF program, we would like to request Executive
Directors’ favorable consideration of the authorities’ request.