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Monrovia- December 12, 2025: Finance and Development Planning Minister Augustine Kpehe Ngafuan has patted President Joseph Boakai on the back for what he termed his ‘visionary leadership’ following the country’s admission into the next phase of negotiations for a second U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Compact.
He said such move, two years into President leadership, is nothing short of a national blessing, one he attributes to hard work, faith, and “a visionary leadership of President Joseph Nyuma Boakai.”
He told reporters Thursday after receiving an official communication from the MCC’s Head of Compact Operations for Africa late Wednesday night.
Minister Ngafuan said the announcement left him “elated” and “ecstatic,” noting that Liberia had “reached a point many thought impossible.”
“When I got the email around 10:30 p.m., I felt that God loves Liberia,” he said. “This is the result of the President’s leadership, the hard work of the team here, and the commitment of the Liberian people.”
Minister Ngafuan stressed that the MCC’s investments have direct impact on everyday life particularly through energy expansion, which he called “the engine of the private sector.”
He reminded the public that Liberia’s first MCC Compact in 2015 delivered US$257 million, largely used to rehabilitate the Mount Coffee Hydropower Plant, which today powers parts of Monrovia.
With national energy access still at 33%, the government aims under its newly completed Liberia Energy Compact to increase access to 75% within five years while reducing the cost of electricity.
“If power becomes affordable, businesses become profitable. When businesses get profitable, they expand. When they expand, they hire,” the minister explained.
“This is how development touches the ordinary man in Voinjama or Lougatuo.” He emphasized that MCC funding comes as grants, not loans, unlike other multilateral financing that increases Liberia’s debt burden.
Though the exact amount of the second compact is yet to be announced, Minister Ngafuan confirmed consultations begin immediately.
“Some people are saying $300 million, some $500 million. It could be above or below $500 million,” he noted. “The final figure depends on the projects we agree on in the coming days.”
According to the minister, MCC assessments once again identified energy and road infrastructure as top constraints to growth. Liberia is already aligning its budget to signal these priorities-allocating $100 million to energy and roads from projected revenue increases.
He pointed to improvements in road connectivity, especially in the southeast, as the reason food prices have stabilized and inflation dropped below 5% last month.
“Nobody asks for party ID cards to use roads or to get electricity,” Minister Ngafuan indicated. He added, “Development is how we unite the country.”
Minister Ngafuan revealed that Liberia’s progress came despite major shifts in U.S. foreign assistance priorities under President Donald Trump.
The MCC increased its scorecard indicators from 20 to 22 and doubled its “hard hurdles”-corruption and now freedom. Failing either automatically disqualifies a country.
“Liberia passed both hard hurdles and 12 of the 22 indicators,” the minister said proudly. Some big countries in our region didn’t pass. Sixteen were dropped. Liberia made it.”
He credited this success to the credibility and negotiating posture of President Boakai’s administration: “We have a leader who doesn’t talk much but works hard. The Americans saw a credible, competent, visionary government.”
The government he asserted will meet MCC officials today via Zoom to begin formal discussions on project scoping and funding levels.
Ngafuan urged citizens to remain patient as the process unfolds saying, “Some challenges we met were not at zero, they were below zero,” the Finance Minister disclosed.
“Getting back to zero takes effort. But we are moving into positive territory.” He ended with a message of unity and gratitude: “This is Liberia’s victory. We worked together across ministries, partners, and the Liberian people. And God loves Liberia.”
Alphonso Toweh
Has been in the profession for over twenty years. He has worked for many international media outlets including: West Africa Magazine, Africa Week Magazine, African Observer and did occasional reporting for CNN, BBC World Service, Sunday Times, NPR, Radio Deutchewells, Radio Netherlands. He is the current correspondent for Reuters
He holds first MA with honors in International Relations and a candidate for second master in International Peace studies and Conflict Resolution from the University of Liberia.
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