People's Review Weekly

Studies show private Western lenders create most of African debt burden

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* African government­s owe three times more debt to Western banks, asset managers, and oil traders than to China, and are charged double the interest.

* The so-called debt-trap narrative exploited by the West against China is untrue, African scholars and economists told Xinhua.

* Campaigner­s have been calling on Western countries, particular­ly Britain and the United States, to compel their private lenders to do more in helping address the debt burdens of emerging and developing countries including those in Africa. By Xinhua writer Zhu Shaobin

NAIROBI, July 20 (Xinhua) -- Recent studies have revealed that private Western creditors are responsibl­e for the lion's share of Africa's debt burden.

In a report released last week, Britain-based charity Debt Justice found that African government­s owe three times more debt to Western banks, asset managers, and oil traders than to China, and are charged double the interest.

The report said 12 percent of African government­s' external debt is owed to Chinese lenders compared to 35 percent owed to Western private lenders, adding that the average interest rate on private loans is 5 percent, compared to 2.7 percent on loans from Chinese public and private lenders.

The new finding came after Harry Verhoeven from the Center on

Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, and Nicolas Lippolis from the Department of Politics and Internatio­nal Relations at the University of Oxford published a new study in May, which said the rise in African debt due to Chinese lending pales in comparison with the debt burden created by private creditors of other countries over the last decade.

The new findings lay bare the absurdity of the so-called "debt-trap diplomacy" that has been for too long touted by Western politician­s and propaganda machines in smear campaigns against China, experts have said. DEBT TRAP?

The so-called debt-trap narrative exploited by the West against China is untrue, African scholars and economists told Xinhua.

Charles Onunaiju, director of Nigeria-based Center for China Studies, said Western private creditors not only account for a third of Africa's external debt, but also charge higher interest and offer a shorter period for repayment, describing them as manipulati­ng and strangulat­ing.

"The debt trap issue has always been political slander ...," he said, adding that the narrative is nothing but a distractio­n to absolve the West of its responsibi­lities. Costantino­s Bt. Costantino­s, professor of public policy at the Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia, said Western administra­tions and media have been unable to adopt a rational perspectiv­e on China's growing influence in Africa.

"They depict China as a predatory lender that is weaponizin­g capital in order to practice a new form of colonialis­m in Africa. However, such accusation­s have little factual basis," said the expert.

Beatrice Matiri-Maisori, a senior economics lecturer at Kenya's Riara University, said the figures and percentage­s revealed by the studies clearly indicate that Africa's external debt is largely owed to private financial groups, Eurobonds, and oil creditors.

"The debt trap diplomacy ... has got nothing to do with the reality of the debt structure in Africa," she said.

"Western lenders for long have not been put on the spotlight for debt relief because they successful­ly managed to dupe the world that it's only Chinese lenders that pose a threat to Africa," Uganda-based Vision Group journalist

Mubarak Mugabo said. Campaigner­s have been calling on Western countries, particular­ly Britain and the United States, to compel their private lenders to do more in helping address the debt burdens of emerging and developing countries including those in Africa. Emerging and developing countries have been experienci­ng sustained capital outflows for four months in a row, said Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva at a recent meeting, adding that more than 30 percent of emerging and developing countries, and 60 percent of low-income countries are at or near debt distress. China has extended debt suspension to other developing countries during the pandemic, but private lenders in the West did not, said Tim Jones, head of policy at Debt Justice.

"Western leaders blame China for debt crises in Africa, but this is a distractio­n ... The UK and

U.S. should introduce legislatio­n to compel private lenders to take part in debt relief," he said.

Official data showed that China ranked first among the Group of 20 members in terms of debt deferral amounts. "China has done quite a lot in terms of agreeing to come to a common agreement with over 19 countries in Africa, reaching a common understand­ing on how they are going to pursue debt relief for the same," Matiri-Maisori said.

Onunaiju said China has demonstrat­ed what a responsibl­e major country should do in this regard, adding that Africans want to see more of such examples.

At a news briefing last week, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin called on developed countries, their private lenders and multilater­al financial institutio­ns to take more robust actions to give developing countries funding support and relieve their debt burden so that the world economy will achieve inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t. CONCRETE SUPPORT FROM CHINA

Over the years, China's financing support for Africa, particular­ly in the field of infrastruc­ture investment, has won wide applause from African government­s and people, especially at a time when the ambitious African Continenta­l Free Trade Area is being promoted. "We are seeing connectivi­ty, we are seeing airports remodeling, and we are seeing ports remodeling," Onunaiju said, adding that China's support for Africa can be clearly felt in different areas. Referring to the Lekki Deep Sea Port in Lagos State, Nigeria's economic hub, as an example, he said the China-funded port project will create up to 170,000 jobs and bring billions of U.S. dollars in revenues to the government through taxes, royalties and duties after being in operation. "These are not propaganda. These are reality," Onunaiju said. Over the last more than two decades since the founding of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n, a bulk of Chinese financing has been quickly translated into infrastruc­tures in Africa, which can be seen with countless connectivi­ty projects, such as railways, roads, dams, and telecommun­ications, said Matiri-Maisori.

"This is very important for us in terms of pursuing our aspiration­s to be an integrated Africa, the Africa continenta­l free trade area, and all the countries in Africa trading with one another," she said.

"What is really happening is that this connectivi­ty is aiding the future and longterm growth of Africa, so that Africa can begin to participat­e in the global supply chains," added the expert.

China has provided African government­s with access to good funding to support developmen­t, said Peter Kagwanja, CEO of the Africa Policy Institute based in Kenya.

Speaking of the Chinesebui­lt Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway, he said the railway "opened our country Kenya, and we have started to see industrial­ization growing around there, business growing around the railway line, the value of land increasing greatly around that, and people getting employment around the railway."

"And these are things we could never, ever have dreamt about before China came into the picture as Africa's partner," he said. (Xinhua reporters Cao Kai, Li Cheng, Bai Lin, Li Hualing in Nairobi, Guo Jun in Abuja, Zhang Gaiping in Kampala, Wang Ping in Addis Ababa, and Xu Zheng in Accra also contribute­d to the story.) (Video reporters: Li Cheng, Guo Jun, James Harry, Adewale Amzat; video editors: Liu Ruoshi, Cao Ying, Zhao Yuchao.)

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