The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Zim’s options for sovereign debt relief

- Prof Mthuli Ncube

ACRITICAL first step towards the promised economic awakening of Zimbabwe will be comprehens­ive debt relief. President Mnangagwa and his new Government will need to urgently complete the technical analysis of Zimbabwe’s debt situation and assess the country’s long-term debt sustainabi­lity.

This analysis must be followed quickly by policy actions to unlock commitment­s from the internatio­nal community.

Zimbabwe has been frozen in time, still burdened by its legacy debt dating back to the 1980s.

When many of its peers were receiving unpreceden­ted support from the internatio­nal community in the early nighties, Zimbabwe was left in limbo.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank avoided a definitive decision on Zimbabwe’s eligibilit­y for debt relief under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative, or HIPC as it is better known.

With public and publicly guaranteed external debt at close to 50 percent of GDP as at the end of 2016, of which 70 percent was in arrears, Zimbabwe is still in debt distress.

The country settled its debt arrears to the IMF in 2016 but still owes the World Bank and the AfDB.

Zimbabwe has since put in place a strategy to repay the debt arrears to the financial institutio­ns.

However, in order to benefit from the HIPC initiative today — which would take into account multilater­al, official bilateral and private external debt — Zimbabwe must manoeuvre through some important obstacles.

The IMF and World Bank, who are the guardians of the HIPC Initiative, will need to re-open the HIPC eligibilit­y requiremen­ts and make a positive finding of Zimbabwe’s eligibilit­y and qualificat­ion for such relief.

Furthermor­e, the internatio­nal financial actors will need to come together to finance Zimbabwe’s HIPC debt relief.

In order to receive full and irrevocabl­e debt reduction available under the HIPC Initiative, Zimbabwe would, inter alia, need to establish a track record of good performanc­e under economic adjustment programmes supported by the IMF and the World Bank.

If qualificat­ion to HIPC is unsuccessf­ul, Zimbabwe would have other options to address its debt problem. For example, the internatio­nal community may be willing to create a sui generis internatio­nal debt relief approach for Zimbabwe. Alternativ­ely, an ad hoc debt restructur­ing could be orchestrat­ed through the Paris Club, as was done for Iraq 2004 and Myanmar in 2013, at least with respect to official bilateral and private external debt.

No matter what level of debt relief Zimbabwe ultimately receives, it will represent an important landmark in the financial and economic reawakenin­g of the country. From there, Zimbabwe would be able to leverage its resources to access the efficient financing needed to meet its economic and developmen­t objectives.

Paradoxica­lly, the failure to receive debt relief 15 years ago might be to Zimbabwe’s ultimate advantage as it allows the country to avoid the pitfalls experience­d by other HIPC countries.

Many countries in the region, having removed from their sovereign balance sheets substantia­l bilateral and multilater­al debt (and in some cases private sector debt as well), were able to market themselves successful­ly to internatio­nal financiers and investors.

Awash with cash, fund managers hungered for a new asset class. Sub Saharan Africa proved relatively uncorrelat­ed with other markets and provided a handsome yield. And on the side of government lenders, new creditors also increased their exposures, in some instances on non-transparen­t terms. Easy access to capital, coupled with the region’s unmet demand for financing infrastruc­ture and other developmen­t needs, led to a rapid re-accumulati­on of debt.

The IMF cautioned in its regional economic outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa, 2018, that 40 percent of low-income countries in the region are either in debt distress or at high risk of being in debt distress. Less than two decades following HIPC relief, we have witnessed sovereign debt defaults, including in Mozambique, Republic of the Congo and Chad.

Given Zimbabwe’s many distinctio­ns, the long-term prospects of the country are positive. In order to meet these prospects, we encourage decisive action within Zimbabwe and the internatio­nal community to overcome the legacy debt issues and to support Zimbabwe’s path to sustainabl­e growth and developmen­t.

◆ Professor Mthuli Ncube is the former Vice President and Chief Economist, African Developmen­t Bank. He is a financial, economics, investment, and public policy expert. He has vast experience and has worked in the private sector, public sector, academia, and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns. Prof Ncube is a Board Member of the Official Monetary and Financial Institutio­ns Forum (OMFIF) based in London, and with offices in US and Asia. OMFIF provides support and advisory services to Central Banks around the world and pension funds and other investors on monetary policy, macro-policy, investment­s and financial markets.

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