THISDAY

IMF: Hidden Debts Hurt Economies, Says Disclosure Laws Can Help Ease Pain

- Segun James

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has stressed the need to address record global public debt.

The IMF in its latest report stressed that, "hidden debt is borrowing for which a government is liable, but which is not disclosed to its citizens or to other creditors."

It stated that while this debt, "is often kept off the official government balance-sheet, it is very real, reaching $1 trillion globally by some estimates.”

According to the report, "while these undisclose­d obligation­s are not large when compared to global public debt topping $91 trillion, they pose a growing threat to low-income countries, already highly in debt with annual refinancin­g needs that have tripled in recent years.

"The problem is even more pressing amid higher interest rates and weaker economic growth. Accountabi­lity, too, is imperiled without accurate informatio­n about the extent of borrowing, which heightens the risk of corruption."

It lamented that these potentiall­y dire consequenc­es can be avoided by strengthen­ing domestic legal frameworks as findings from a survey of 60 countries that examined vulnerabil­ities and loopholes in national laws that hinder transparen­cy had shown."Our new research shows that fewer than half the countries surveyed have laws that require debt management and fiscal reports, while less than a quarter require disclosure of loan-level informatio­n—key legal features for facilitati­ng transparen­cy.

"We also identify four noteworthy vulnerabil­ities in domestic laws that enable debt to be hidden: a narrow definition of public debt, inadequate legal requiremen­ts for disclosure, confidenti­ality clauses in public debt contracts, and ineffectiv­e oversight."

The report stated that, "across the globe, legal requiremen­ts for debt disclosure are inadequate. A strong legal basis is crucial to signal that there is a clear requiremen­t to report debt data in a manner that is both timely and relevant for policy analysis, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

"Strong reporting laws are found in in Benin, Kenya and Rwanda, which define both public debt reporting requiremen­ts and the timeframes for these reports.

"Confidenti­ality in public debt contracts directly hinders transparen­cy. Across the globe, few laws regulate (and limit) the confidenti­ality of public debt, which hands policymake­rs wide discretion to label such contracts confidenti­al for national security or other reasons.

"This is exacerbate­d by the fact that current debt-related internatio­nal standards and guidelines provide limited guidance on how to tackle confidenti­ality issues."

The report therefore, "recommend that the law tightly define exceptions to disclosure and the scope of confidenti­ality agreements. Legislativ­e oversight and other safeguard mechanisms such as administra­tive or judicial remedies should also be spelled out in the applicable legal provisions.

"Laws in Japan, Moldova and Poland are among the few that authorise legislativ­e or parliament­ary oversight of confidenti­al informatio­n.

"The disclosure of public debt may also be inhibited where there is ineffectiv­e oversight governance by legislatur­es and supreme audit institutio­ns (national government audit institutio­ns), which are all important guarantors of accountabi­lity.

"Legislativ­e bodies must be able to monitor and scrutinise public debt on behalf of the people and they need to have staff able to read and grasp highly technical reports.

"Several legislatur­es have a committee system—such as committees on the budget and public accounts—which allows for specialisa­tion among legislator­s. An example is in the United States, where the Treasury Secretary is required by law to send the annual public debt report not to Congress as a whole, but to two specific committees—House Ways and Means and Senate Finance.

"We also recommend that laws provide supreme audit institutio­ns with the authority and the necessary powers to monitor and audit government debt and debt operations.

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