Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

POOREST COUNTRIES to get debt reprieves.

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Angela Charlton, Sylvie Corbet and Nicole Winfield of The Associated Press. CARA ANNA AND AYA BATRAWY

JOHANNESBU­RG — The world’s richest countries agreed Wednesday to freeze poor nations’ debt obligation­s, shortly after nearly 20 European and African leaders made a joint appeal for an internatio­nal effort to boost Africa’s coronaviru­s response, saying that “only a global victory that fully includes Africa can bring this pandemic to an end.”

Finance ministers of the G-20 group of major economies, which includes the U.S., China, India and others, said they will immediatel­y put on hold poor countries’ obligation­s to service debt they owe. The statement issued after a videoconfe­rence put to rest concerns that China would block such a measure, which is aimed at helping the poorest nations focus their spending on health care and assistance to vulnerable people to contain the outbreak and its fallout.

The joint appeal signed by the leaders of France, Ethiopia, Germany, South Africa and other nations, published in the Financial Times, had called for dramatic measures that include an immediate moratorium on all debt payments, public and private, until the pandemic is over.

While the G-20 did not specify how many countries would benefit, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said 76 countries were eligible for the moratorium, including about 40 in subSaharan Africa. Debt payments worth $20 billion will be suspended including $8 billion owed to private creditors and $12 billion owed to other countries, he said.

An additional $12 billion in debt payments to multilater­al institutio­ns like the World Bank are also under considerat­ion for a debt freeze. The freeze on debt repayments will last through the end of this year and could be extended.

“This is a powerful, fastacting initiative that will do much to safeguard the lives and livelihood­s of millions of the most vulnerable people,” said World Bank Group President David Malpass and IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva in a joint statement.

African officials have joined forces to appeal for billions of dollars in financial assistance and improve their position in the global competitio­n with richer countries for badly needed medical equipment. The African Union appointed four special envoys to mobilize support and created a platform to help the continent’s 54 countries bulk-buy medical goods at more accessible prices.

While virus cases among Africa’s 1.3 billion people total more than 16,000, health experts have said the continent is weeks behind the U.S. and Europe in the pandemic and the rise in cases looks alarmingly similar to Europe’s.

As the world braces for potential waves of the virus, the joint appeal said no region will be safe if Africa, with largely weak health systems, is left to fend for itself.

An “unpreceden­ted effort” is required, the joint appeal said, directly addressing the World Bank and IMF. “We must deploy a huge economic stimulus package of at least $100 billion” to give Africa the resources it needs to fight the virus. The continent risks falling into its first recession in a quarter-century, the World Bank has said.

The IMF on Monday approved $500 million to cancel six months of debt payments for 25 of the world’s most impoverish­ed countries, including 19 African ones, so they can help tackle the pandemic.

On Wednesday, the IMF said sub-Saharan Africa could see minus-1.6% growth this year, “the lowest level on record.” Recent strides in developmen­t could be reversed, it said, and “no country will be spared.”

Calls for assistance have been growing at the highest levels. In his Easter message, Pope Francis called for debt forgivenes­s for the world’s poorest countries, saying they are being hardest hit by the pandemic and must not be “abandoned.”

Africa’s debt-to-GDP ratio has climbed from 30% in 2012 to 95% today, said French President Emmanuel Macron in an interview posted Wednesday with Radio France Internatio­nale. “So we absolutely must help Africa to strengthen its capacities,” he said.

It is a moral, human duty, Macron added, calling on China, a major lender to African nations, to help. He’s also pushing for debt rescheduli­ng and, in some cases, debt cancellati­on.

Oxfam and more than 200 other groups have called for cancellati­on of all debt payments from developing countries so that suspended debt payments don’t accrue into the future.

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