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Gabon's Finance Minister is replaced as debt concerns mount

According to a decree issued by the President of Gabon, Brice Oligui Nguema, Henri-Claude Oyima was replaced as Finance Minister. The Central African oil-producing?country is grappling with a lack of liquidity and a rise in arrears.

Fitch, the ratings agency, said that Gabon's long-term currency issuer default rating has been downgraded.

Oyima was appointed finance minister after Nguema's victory in the first presidential elections since his coup in 2023.

According to a presidential?decree issued late Thursday, technical adviser Thierry Minko will?take over as the "minister of finance, economy, debt, and shareholdings" responsible for fighting high living costs.

According to the decree, Marc Abeghe will be a senior official in charge of budgets at the ministry.

Fitch cited an increasing fiscal deficit and a lack of creditor funding as reasons for downgrading Gabon's foreign currency issuer default ratings.

The agency stated that it expected the government debt to rise from 72.9% in 2024 to 80.4% by 2025, and then to 85.5% by 2026. By 2027, they expect the debt to reach 86.7%.

The Gabon presidency announced in December that it planned to introduce a housing tax by 2026 in order to improve road maintenance, public lighting and city cleanliness. (Reporting and writing by Gerauds Wifried Obangome, Anait Miridzhanian, Editing by Robbie Corey Boulet and Gareth Jones).

(source: Reuters)