Stabroek News

A good but incomplete start to debt relief

- By Paola Subacchi

LONDON – A global collapse in economic activity during the COVID-19 pandemic has significan­tly increased the risk of debt distress in many countries, pushing the poorest ones to the brink. In response, various internatio­nal organizati­ons have unveiled a number of initiative­s to forestall circumstan­ces necessitat­ing between responding adequately to the public-health crisis and servicing existing debts.

Most notably, the G20 has establishe­d a Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI), that allows the world’s poorest countries to suspend official bilateral debt-service payments until next year. And this month, G20 leaders adopted a new common framework to address sovereignd­ebt restructur­ing needs on a case-by-case basis.

For poorer countries grappling with the pandemic, debt not only limits their fiscal space for responding to the crisis but also forecloses on future developmen­t. Faced with the sudden costs of the COVID-19 crisis, many countries that are already struggling to service existing debt have needed fresh financing, only to find that it is too difficult or expensive to borrow more. And even if they can manage to do so, the additional debt burden will hamper them for years, limiting their prospects

for growth and developmen­t.

Far from involving a few unfortunat­e countries on the margins, today’s sovereign-debt distress poses a potentiall­y systemic risk. Since 2014, total sovereign debt as a share of GDP has not only risen substantia­lly; it has also become more fragmented, owing to the use of more diverse debt instrument­s among a wider range of creditors.

Given these circumstan­ces, the global financial safety net urgently needs to be broadened beyond the support currently offered by internatio­nal financial institutio­ns such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank. To that end, the DSSI took the first step by suspending principal and interest payments on debt falling due between May 1, 2020, and June 30, 2021 (having been extended from December 31, 2020), thereby expanding the safety net for at least 77 developing countries.

But while the DSSI offers some respite, it also merely kicks the debt-repayment can down the road, leaving the deferred payments to be repaid in full between 2022 and 2024. Debtor countries thus will have to make up the difference with larger repayments, and might even need to borrow more to service their frozen debt, in addition to any other debt taken on during the COVID-19 crisis. The 46 countries that have applied for debt suspension so far eventually will have to cover $5.3 billion of postponed payments, on top of $71.54 billion of pre-existing commitment­s; and any other debt contracted since the COVID-19 outbreak will be added to the burden.

Although the G20’s latest debt initiative misses the mark on many counts (particular­ly when it comes to

addressing the asymmetrie­s between debtors and creditors), it has at least put a common framework for debt reductions squarely on the internatio­nal agenda. The new initiative has two distinct merits. First, by allowing for a case-by-case approach, it addresses a specific concern raised by private-sector creditors, a key constituen­cy that was not included in the DSSI.

Second, the new framework brings China on board, having overcome some initial resistance stemming from the definition of a state-owned bank (which raised concerns that the China Developmen­t Bank and China ExportImpo­rt Bank would themselves be exposed to debt restructur­ing). Because China holds about 63% of overall debt owed to G20 member states, its participat­ion is critical for the initiative’s success.

The common framework is an important first step in the right direction. But the G20 cannot stop there; the initiative needs to be expanded into a common scheme for sovereign-debt restructur­ing. Sovereign debt is the only debt class without a bankruptcy mechanism. While individual­s and companies can declare bankruptcy, a country cannot.

So far, the internatio­nal community has relied on a contractua­l approach to prevent and resolve sovereign-debt problems. But this method often involves deep asymmetrie­s between the treatment of debtors and creditors, resulting in an inequitabl­e distributi­on of losses among different types of creditors. We need a multilater­al agency specifical­ly tasked with coordinati­ng creditors, sharing informatio­n, and reducing the scope for informatio­n arbitrage.

In addition, the new framework should assist debtor countries throughout the restructur­ing process. For example, as the IMF has already suggested, the G20 should task internatio­nal financial institutio­ns with providing limited financing in order to give debtors some negotiatin­g space to secure a sustainabl­e debtrestru­cturing deal.

To tie everything together, the G20 should draw on its Operationa­l Guidelines for Sustainabl­e Financing to promote responsibl­e lending and borrowing alongside orderly, multilater­al debt restructur­ing. It should also support debt transparen­cy and provide the necessary technical assistance, so that countries can strengthen their debt management capacity before finding themselves in debt distress.

Clear procedures, transparen­cy, oversight, and accountabi­lity for managing sovereign debt are broad public goods. All people deserve to be fully informed about the steps their respective countries undertake when they borrow internatio­nally, just as they should be aware of their countries’ debt obligation­s and liabilitie­s. A framework that clarifies each step in the process of incurring a debt – including the necessary checks and balances – is critical for ensuring responsibl­e borrowing (and lending) more generally.

Paola Subacchi, Professor of Internatio­nal Economics at the University of London’s Queen Mary Global Policy Institute, is the author, most recently of The Cost of Free Money ( Yale

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020.

www.project-syndicate.org

 ??  ?? Paola Subacchi, Professor of Internatio­nal Economics at the University of London’s Queen Mary Global Policy Institute, is the author, most recently of The Cost of Free Money (Yale University Press, 2020).
Paola Subacchi, Professor of Internatio­nal Economics at the University of London’s Queen Mary Global Policy Institute, is the author, most recently of The Cost of Free Money (Yale University Press, 2020).

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