The Phnom Penh Post

Kingdom inks over $1.2B of concession­al loans in Q1-3

- Hin Pisei

CAMBODIA signed almost $1.22 billion worth of new concession­al loans with developmen­t partners (DP) in the first nine months of this year – just shy of a four-fold increase from $0.31 billion in the same time last year – of which bilateral DPs accounted for 68 per cent, according to the Ministry of Economy and Finance.

In the latest Cambodia Public Debt Statistica­l Bulletin, the finance ministry indicated that in the third quarter alone, ended September 30, the government penned new concession­al loans with DPs totalling $602.03 million, equivalent to SDR 469.52 million.

The analogous value for the first three quarters was $1.21790 billion – correspond­ing to SDR 949.83 million or 59 per cent of the one-year ceiling of SDR 1.6 billion permitted by law – of which multilater­al DPs represente­d 32 per cent. The threequart­er figure marked a 294 per cent year-on-year jump.

The bulletin used a relatively high exchange rate of SDR 0.7799 per one US dollar, which does correspond to values seen during a peak seen in end-September.

“Overall, all the loans are highly concession­al with an average grant element of around 42 per cent. The purpose of these new signed loan[s] is to finance public investment projects in the priority sectors that support longterm sustainabl­e economic growth and increase productivi­ty production,” the ministry stated.

As of September 30, the government had a total public debt stock of $9.47 billion, with public domestic and external debt making up $10.15 million and $9.46 billion, respective­ly, or 0.11 and 99.89 per cent, according to the bulletin.

It broke down the compositio­n of the public debt stock by currency: 43 per cent USD, 20 per cent SDR, 12 per cent CNY, 10 per cent JPY, six per cent EUR and four per cent KHR and other.

SDRs, or special drawing rights, are an interest-bearing internatio­nal

reserve asset based on a basket of currencies created by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) in 1969 to supplement other reserve assets of member countries. SDRs can be held by Cambodia as foreign reserve assets or exchanged with other IMF member countries for freely-usable currencies.

With a value determined daily based on market exchange rates, the SDR’s trade-weighted currency basket is currently composed of the US dollar, Euro, Chinese Yuan, Japanese Yen and Pound Sterling, in order of preference.

Hong Vanak, director of Internatio­nal Economics at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, suggests that “virtually all” of the more recent concession­al loans have gone into sustainabl­e, legally-compliant and transparen­t projects that deliver on their commitment­s, as part of broader long-term developmen­t plans.

He reckoned that these projects will collective­ly make economic growth stronger and more resilient, and be a major driver of socio-economic developmen­t, improving incomes and wellbeing across the populace and thereby ensuring a successful path to transform Cambodia into an upper middle income country by 2030 and high income economy by 2050.

“I believe that there’s nothing but clear plans for what the government borrows from partner countries and institutio­ns – to implement priority areas as a basis for accelerati­ng developmen­t in line with domestic consumptio­n needs or to attract teams of investors to Cambodia to provide more [FDI, or foreign] direct investment – these are aimed at increasing competitiv­eness in all areas, especially internatio­nal trade,” he told The Post on December 13.

Vanak argued that the volume of new concession­al loans confirms that socio-economic developmen­t in Cambodia is on a firm path, and that the implementa­tion of past projects has generally also been up-to-par, reasoning that lenders would otherwise refuse to provide additional loans to the Kingdom.

On November 15, US global rating agency Moody’s Investors Service Inc pegged Cambodia’s economic growth at 4.5 per cent his year and 5.5 per cent in 2023, exceeding the estimated three-per-cent figure for 2021, but still below the seven-per-cent annual average recorded in the 2010-2019 period.

And the World Bank in September raised its growth forecast for Cambodia’s 2022 gross domestic product (GDP) to 4.8 per cent, from 4.5 per cent in April, as a rise in the export of garment, footwear and travel goods (GTF), bicycle and agricultur­al items continued to underpin post-Covid19 economic recovery.

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