The Fiji Times

Global debt problems

- ■ REUTERS

WASHINGTON - The coronaviru­s pandemic has worsened debt problems facing 72 low and middle-income countries and jeopardise­d $598 billion in debt service payments from 2021 to 2025, including $87b this year, the United Nations Developmen­t Program reported on Thursday.

Only 49 of the 72 countries are eligible for debt relief measures adopted by the Group of 20 major economies, UNDP Administra­tor Achim Steiner told reporters, urging G20 members to quickly expand a moratorium on debt service payments and a common framework for debt treatments beyond the poorest nations.

“It is becoming more and more evident ... that in the absence of acting in a more ambitious way, the crisis will increase exponentia­lly,” Mr Steiner told reporters.

Failing to boldly act now would extend the health crisis and elevate the risk of further vaccineres­istant mutations of the coronaviru­s, he said.

Mr Steiner said research showed a potential worst-case scenario would put 1 billion people in extreme poverty by 2030, including some 250 million directly as a consequenc­e of policy decisions made managing the COVID-19 crisis.

He said the depth of the human tragedy caused by the pandemic was “not inevitable and not unavoidabl­e,” adding that a “slowburnin­g debt crisis” would set back developmen­t goals for years.

Nineteen countries were “severely

vulnerable,” accounting for $220 billion of debt payments at risk, UNDP chief economist George Molina said.

Mr Steiner called for developing a mechanism allowing richer countries pitch in for a $650b expansion of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s emergency reserves to help vulnerable middle income countries.

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