Ireland repays remaining €4.5bn owed to IMF

Repayment comes day after country paid back €1bn in loans to Sweden and Denmark

The combined savings for Ireland by servicing all the loans early is expected to be  €150m
The combined savings for Ireland by servicing all the loans early is expected to be €150m

Ireland has repaid the remaining €4.5 billion it owes the International Monetary Fund (IMF) just a day after it paid back €1 billion in bilateral loans from Sweden and Denmark.

The National Treasury Management Agency said late on Wednesday it had completed early repayment of the full outstanding IMF loan facility in a move that discharges all of the loan obligations that were due to fall from January 2021 to December 2023.

Earlier this week Ireland repaid a €600 million loan to Sweden and a €400 million loan to Denmark ahead of schedule.

The combined savings from servicing all the loans early is expected to be around €150 million.

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The Danish finance ministry on Tuesday praised Ireland for its “exemplary” approach to restoring its public finances after repaying the loan, which was offered as part of the international recovery package at the time of the financial crisis.

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor is a former Irish Times business journalist