The Pak Banker

Ex-SBP chief argues against 'piecemeal' debt restructur­ing

- KARACHI

Former central bank governor Syed Salim Raza has said Pakistan should avoid going for a "piecemeal restructur­ing" of its dollar-denominate­d debt.

Speaking at a recent seminar on national economic challenges, the former chief of the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said that asking one of the many creditors to restructur­e the debt was "unfair" and tantamount to subsidisin­g the other creditors.

"It's reasonable that we think of one substantia­l restructur­ing," he said.

His advice follows weeks of reporting by the local press on the rising level of credit default swap (CDS), which is a tool that internatio­nal bondholder­s use to protect themselves from a possible default by debt-issuing sovereign nations.

Last month, Finance Minister

Ishaq Dar said Pakistan would seek the rescheduli­ng of some $27 billion non-Paris Club debt that Islamabad owes mainly to China.

Referring to the Common Framework for Debt Treatment that the Group of Twenty (G20) recently came up with, Mr Raza said the advanced economies have accepted that there's going to be a "measure of strain" with respect to loan repayments by developing countries.

"It's better that the debt problem is handled pre-emptively rather than waiting for defaults like in the 1980s or in the Asian crisis - which then feed on themselves and make matters much worse," he said.

The new "debt treatment" forum is tasked with anticipati­ng the repayment problems that the emerging markets are going to have and seeking debt restructur­ing on a pre-emptive basis. Countries can apply for such rescheduli­ng and the forum will then set up a creditor committee within six weeks to help the struggling borrowers, he said.

As for the domestic debt, he said the government has been crowding out the private sector whose share in the overall credit is less than onefifth. "We need an empowered centralise­d debt management office with support from market operators to lower the long-term cost of debt," he said.

The former SBP governor urged the government to create a "yield curve" - varying interest rates on bonds having equal credit quality but differing maturity dates. A liquid market where retail investors actively participat­e in government debt trading through an online portal will pave the way for the private sector to float fixed-rate bonds that are currently absent, he noted.

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