National Post

Poor countries’ debt rose 12% in 2020 to record US$860B

- andrea shalal

WASHINGTON • The World Bank on Monday warned of a significan­t 12-per-cent rise in the debt burden of the world’s low-income countries to a record US$860 billion in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and called for urgent efforts to reduce debt levels.

World Bank president David Malpass told reporters the bank’s Internatio­nal Debt Statistics 2022 report showed a dramatic increase in the debt vulnerabil­ities facing low- and middle-income countries; he also urged for comprehens­ive efforts to help countries reach more sustainabl­e debt levels.

“We need a comprehens­ive approach to the debt problem, including debt reduction, swifter restructur­ing and improved transparen­cy,” Malpass said in a statement accompanyi­ng the new report.

He said half of the world’s poorest countries were in external debt distress or at high risk of it.

Malpass said sustainabl­e debt levels were needed to help countries achieve economic recovery and reduce poverty.

The report said the external debt stocks of low- and middle-income countries combined rose 5.3 per cent in 2020 to US$8.7 trillion, affecting countries in all regions.

It said the rise in external debt outpaced gross national income (GNI) and export growth, with the external debt-to-gni ratio, excluding China, rising five percentage points to 42 per cent in 2020, while their debt-to-export ratio surged to 154 per cent in 2020 from 126 per cent in 2019.

Malpass said debt restructur­ing efforts were urgently needed given the expiration at the end of this year of the Group of 20 major economies’ Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI), which has offered temporary deferral of debt payments.

The G20 and Paris Club of official creditors launched a Common Framework for Debt Treatments last year to restructur­e unsustaina­ble debt situations and protracted financing gaps in Dssi-eligible countries, but only three countries — Ethiopia, Chad and Zambia — have applied thus far.

Malpass said further debt payment freezes could be included as part of Common Framework debt restructur­ings, but more work was also needed to increase the participat­ion of private sector creditors, who have thus far been reluctant to get involved.

The report showed that net inflows from multilater­al creditors to low- and middle-income countries rose to US$117 billion in 2020, the highest level in a decade.

Net lending to low-income countries rose 25 per cent to US$71 billion, also the highest level in a decade, with the IMF and other multilater­al creditors providing US$42 billion and bilateral creditors US$10 billion, it said.

Carmen Reinhart, the World Bank’s chief economist, said the challenges facing highly indebted countries could get worse as interest rates rose.

The World Bank said it expanded the 2022 report to boost transparen­cy about global debt levels by providing more detailed and disaggrega­ted data on external debt.

The data now include a breakdown of a borrowing country’s external debt stock to show the amount owed to each official and private creditor, the currency compositio­n of this debt, and the terms on which loans were extended.

 ?? ASHRAF SHAZLY / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? World Bank president David Malpass says sustainabl­e debt levels are needed to help countries achieve economic recovery and reduce poverty.
ASHRAF SHAZLY / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES World Bank president David Malpass says sustainabl­e debt levels are needed to help countries achieve economic recovery and reduce poverty.

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