This is the conclusion of an International Monetary Fund (IMF) mission led by Mr. Brian Ames.

He said in a statement:

At the end of the year, inflation declined to about 53 percent, slightly above the government's target of 49 percent. Gross international reserves rose from a historic low of US$25 million in February 2009 to US$1 billion at end-December (10 weeks of non-aid import cover) following the disbursement of emergency assistance from the IMF and other development partners, the disbursement of the first tranche of the signature bonus under the Sino-Congolese Cooperation Agreement, and the general and special allocations of special drawing rights (SDRs) from the IMF to member countries.

“The authorities successfully implemented their 2009 economic program and observed all the quantitative performance criteria and all the indicative targets with the exception of that related to base money, owing to a lack of timely coordination between the Treasury and the Central Bank, which resulted in excess liquidity in the economy. Although only 2 of the 9 structural benchmarks were observed as programmed, the remaining seven are expected to be met by end-April.

“The authorities continued to implement their Treasury Plan on a cash basis with zero net credit to government from the banking system in January and February 2010. However, the level and composition of spending deviated from the program, but was financed by higher one-off oil tax revenues. The mission reached understandings with the authorities on a revised Treasury Plan for 2010 that is consistent with the authorities' macroeconomic objectives.

“The mission, in collaboration with World Bank staff, reviewed the status of the HIPC triggers, whose observance is a condition for reaching the completion point and receiving substantial debt relief from external creditors. There has been good progress on all fronts, but observance of the seven triggers will require steadfast actions by the government. This will be facilitated by the monitoring committee which has been created under the authority of the Prime Minister. If all goes well on the authorities' part, the IMF and World Bank staffs expect to submit the request for debt relief under the HIPC Initiative and the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative to their respective Boards before end-June. Looking ahead, additional donor budget support would help maintain macroeconomic stability and protect pro-poor spending.