Zambia's newly-appointed finance minister on Friday pledged to conclude talks with the IMF on a lending programme by October as he seeks to pull the southern African country out of its protracted debt crisis. President Hakainde Hichilema, who was elected earlier this month by a landslide, named Situmbeko Musokotwane, an experienced international economist, to a second stint as Zambia's finance minister. The appointment of Mr Musokotwane, who held the same post from 2008 to 2011, was announced three days after Mr Hichilema pledged at his swearing-in ceremony to bring public spending and the budget deficit under control. "Unless we do something to the budget, then the budget will be mainly for paying salaries and also servicing debt," with nothing left over to invest in developing the country, Mr Musokotwane said after his appointment. Mr Musokotwane, a former deputy central bank governor who has also held positions with the International Monetary Fund and World Bank will face fraught negotiations with multiple creditors on the country's $12 billion external debt. "The answer is to talk to the people we owe money so that we can pay at a slower pace stretched over a longer period," he said. "He will be seen as a safe pair of hands," Standard Chartered's Razia Khan said in a note. "His experience in dealing with the challenges ... of the global financial crisis, as well as an understanding of the conditions needed for mining investment, will be additional positives." Zambia, Africa's second-biggest copper producer, became Africa's first pandemic-era sovereign default in November after failing to keep up with international debt servicing payments. Of its foreign debt, some $3bn is in Eurobonds, $3.5bn is bilateral debt, $2.1bn is owed to multilateral lending agencies such as the IMF, and $2.9bn to commercial banks. Complicating things further, about a quarter of the total is held by either China or Chinese entities via deals that have strict secrecy clauses. That has rendered talks for IMF debt relief particularly tough. Zambia's government borrowed too much during boom times over the last decade and was then hit by a fall in commodity prices, triggering a recession exacerbated by the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. Mr Hichilema beat incumbent Edgar Lungu in the August 12 election, his sixth run for the presidency and Zambia's third peaceful change of power to an opposition party since independence from Britain in 1964. The country's dollar-denominated sovereign bonds have since rallied, reflecting market optimism in a solution to its debt woes. The bonds did not immediately react to the new appointment, but they have added around 11 cents across the curve since Mr Hichilema's win, with the spread of the debt over safe-haven US Treasuries narrowing to 1,961 points this week, the lowest since March 2020.