Stabroek News

Creditor support comes in for Barbados debt exchange offer

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(Barbados Nation) The Government of Barbados announced yesterday the nearuniver­sal participat­ion of affected creditors in the BBD Debt Exchange Offer that was launched on September 7.

Although the Central Bank of Barbados (CBB) continues to reconcile tenders in its role as exchange agent for the transactio­n, preliminar­y estimates indicate that holders of more than 90 per cent of eligible claims have accepted the Government’s restructur­ing offer.

The Government announced that its exchange offer received the unanimous support of the commercial banks, the general and life and insurers, the National Insurance Scheme (NIS), the CBB, as well the support of ordinary Barbadians and firms holding claims on the Government and its public sector. The CBB will provide final participat­ion figures as soon as the reconcilia­tion process has been completed.

The BBD Debt Exchange Offer is part of the Government’s Comprehens­ive Debt Restructur­ing, which includes commercial and official bilateral claims denominate­d in foreign currency.

The objective of the Comprehens­ive Debt Restructur­ing is to place the country’s debt and public finances on a sustainabl­e footing after a decade of economic mismanagem­ent, in conjunctio­n with the reforms and adjustment­s contemplat­ed under the Barbados Economic Reform and Transforma­tion Plan (BERT).

The BERT is being supported by a four-year Extended Fund Facility (EFF) from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), approved by its Executive Board on October 1.

The Government also announced that the remarkably strong participat­ion is well in excess of the voting threshold required under the “collective action” legislatio­n introduced into Parliament on September 25.

The Government will therefore now proceed to ask Parliament to enact the legislatio­n, which converts all tendered claims into a single class of creditors for purposes of voting on the Comprehens­ive Debt Restructur­ing Programme. If approved in Parliament, the legislatio­n would allow the Government to apply the restructur­ing terms supported by the considerab­le supermajor­ity of creditors to the claims of those who did not tender or who chose not to accept the offer, thereby ensuring that no creditor is prejudiced by being left holding non-performing claims after the closing of the transactio­n.

Informatio­n on the terms that participat­ing creditors have chosen to support can be found on the creditor portal on the Government Informatio­n Services (GIS) website.

It is expected that the closing of the transactio­n will take place on or before October 31, at which point the new debt instrument­s will be issued to all affected creditors, including the holders that did not tender.

The closing of the transactio­n will mark the completion of $11.9 billion in claims on the Government of Barbados and its public sector, which is equivalent to US$5.95 billion.

The claims being treated included Treasury Bills, Treasury Notes and Debentures, loans owed by the Government and certain State-Owned Enterprise­s (SOEs), as well a majority of the extensive arrears that had been allowed to accumulate by the time the Mia Mottley administra­tion took office on May 25.

The Government will also clear approximat­ely $830 million of arrears, or just over half of the $1.6 billion total outstandin­g, and approximat­ely 85 per cent of the arrears owed to private sector firms and suppliers. The Government will also clear 100 per cent of the arrears incurred to the NIS by the public sector during the previous administra­tion.

Commenting on the results of the BBD Debt Exchange Offer, Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Mia Amor Mottley said: “I would like to extended my sincere appreciati­on and gratitude to all of those holders of Barbados dollar-denominate­d claims, both institutio­ns and individual­s alike, who have chosen to support the BBD Debt Exchange Offer in such a decisive and extraordin­ary manner.

“Today truly marks a turning point for Barbados, when we begin to throw off the shackles of an unsustaina­ble debt burden that was thrust upon us by the reckless and uncontroll­ed borrowing and spending of the last ten years.

“The overwhelmi­ng result says a lot about us as a people, that we can come together, making sacrifices and taking difficult decisions, when the future of our beloved country is at stake. This operation eradicates the greatest threat to the financial viability of Barbados, and transforms our economic outlook.”

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 ??  ?? The Central Bank of Barbados
The Central Bank of Barbados

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