"Initially, there is a plan to ask parliament for approval to
issue bonds worth up to 800 million euros next year," the
official said. It was too early to determine the timing and
exact value of the bonds, the official added.
In July Tunisia has sold a seven-year, euro-denominated
bond worth 700 million euros at an interest rate of 6.37%.
It needs total financing next year worth 11 billion dinars
against 10 billion dinars in 2019, the source told Reuters,
asking not to be named.
The external borrowing requirement will rise from 7 billion to
about 8.5 billion, he said.
Tunisia’s economy has been in trouble since the toppling of
autocrat Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011, with unemployment and
inflation shooting up.
But the government official said signs of economic recovery
would be clear in 2020, expecting gross domestic product growth
to exceed 3%, compared with the 2.5% expected this year. He
added that GDP growth could reach 3.4%, driven by higher gas
output and growth in agricultural production.
The Nawara natural gas field, a project jointly owned by
Austria’s OMV and the Tunisian National Oil Co., ETAP, started
production two months ago. It will almost double national gas
output to 65,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, the
government said.
Tunisia also expects record production of dates and olive oil,
two of its main exports.
The government aims to reduce its budget deficit from the 3.9%
of GDP expected this year to 3% in 2020.
(Reporting By Tarek Amara, editing by Larry King)
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