Qatar Tribune

Global debt surges to record high $188 tn: IMF

The figure is equivalent to more than double the world’s economic output

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THE global debt load has surged to a new all-time record equivalent to more than double the world’s economic output, IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva warned Thursday.

While private sector borrowing accounts for the vast majority of the total, the rise puts government­s and individual­s at risk if the economy slows, she said.

“Global debt -- both public and private -- has reached an all-time high of 188 trillion. This amounts to about 230 percent of world output,” Georgieva said in a speech to open a two-day conference on debt. That is up from the previous record of 1 4 trillion in 201 , according to IMF figures.

While interest rates remain low, borrowers can use debt to make investment­s in productive activities or weather a bout of low commodity prices.

But it can become “a drag on growth,” she said.

Regulation­s for banks have been tightened up since the financial crisis of 2008 but the IMF says risk has migrated elsewhere, including to the corporate sector.

“The bottom line is that high debt burdens have left many government­s, companies, and households vulnerable to a sudden tightening of financial conditions,” she cautioned.

Corporate debt accounts for about two thirds of the total but government borrowing has risen as well in the wake of the global financial crisis.

“Public debt in advanced economies is at levels not seen since the Second World War,” she warned. And “emerging market public debt is at levels last seen during the 1980s debt crisis.”

She called for steps to ensure “borrowing is more sustainabl­e,” including making lending practices more transparen­t and preparing for debt restructur­ing with “non-traditiona­l lenders” -- an apparent reference to China, which has become a major creditor to developing nations including in Africa.

 ??  ?? IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva
IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva

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