Cape Argus

Africa asking China to ease debt burden

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CHINA must do more to help ease the debt burden of African countries facing economic calamity due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, Ghana’s finance minister said.

Africa accounts for just a fraction of global cases of the disease, but its countries are already feeling the impact, with the continent’s economies expected to contract, putting about 20 million jobs at risk.

“My feeling is that China has to come on stronger,” Ken Ofori-Atta said during a conversati­on on Monday with Masood Ahmed, president of the Washington-based Center for Global Developmen­t, that was posted on the think-tank’s website.

“African debt to China is $145 billion (R2.6 trillion) or so, over $8bn in payments is required this year… So that needs to be looked at.”

African government­s are calling for $100bn in assistance, including support for a moratorium on all external debt and eventually some debt write-offs.

Experts say any effort to pause debt servicing or extend more comprehens­ive debt relief to developing countries will struggle without China taking on a key role in the process.

China said yesterday that it recognised that developing countries faced a greater challenge, but it did not mention any specific debt-relief measures that it would implement.

Foreign ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian, at a daily press briefing, said China would communicat­e with the relevant countries through diplomatic channels. “For countries who face debt difficulti­es, China will never force them, but will resolve it through consultati­on via bilateral channels.”

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank are mobilising resources to support economies reeling from the pandemic.

But they are also calling for wealthy nations to suspend payments on bilateral debt owed by poor countries.

Ofori-Atta currently chairs the Developmen­t Committee, a ministeria­l-level forum that advises the World Bank and the IMF on developmen­t issues.

The two US-based multilater­als will hold virtual annual spring meetings later this month.

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