A decade after debt
forgiveness, Africa still hooked on dollars
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[May 19, 2017]
By Sujata Rao and Karin Strohecker
LONDON
(Reuters) - When rich countries wrote off billions of dollars of African
debt in 2005, they hoped governments would think twice about borrowing
again in costly foreign currencies.
Over a decade later, most sub-Saharan African countries still rely on
U.S. dollar-denominated debt to finance their economies. Some investors
say this is sowing the seeds of future debt crises if local currencies
devalue and make dollar debt repayments more expensive.
Aside from South Africa and Nigeria, governments have not yet done
enough to develop capital markets that would have allowed them to raise
more money in their own currencies, investors say.
United Nations trade body UNCTAD estimates that Africa's external debt
stock rapidly grew to $443 billion by 2013 through bilateral borrowing,
syndicated loans and bonds. But since then sharp currency devaluations
across the continent have pushed up the cost of servicing this debt
pile, which continues to grow.
"We all thought (Africa) was going to be the next emerging market.
Governments should have been getting rid of dollar liabilities and
moving into local currency liabilities, which is what Brazil did 20
years ago and Mexico 30 years ago," said Bryan Carter, head of emerging
debt at BNP Paribas Investment Partners.
In 2007 Carter was optimistic enough to hold a third of his fund in
sub-African local debt. Now he has zero exposure outside of South
Africa, he said, adding: "They just fell back into the 'original sin'
trap of borrowing in dollars."
After the debt, owed to multilateral organizations such as the
International Monetary Fund, was wiped out, investors such as Carter
were prepared to accept the risks of buying local currency bonds, in
exchange for higher returns.
That would have allowed governments to run their economies, regardless
of exchange rate moves between the U.S. dollar and domestic currencies.
Currency and interest rates fluctuations have long been a source of
emerging market crises.
Stimulating local bond markets, could have helped start a domestic
savings and investment industry and also helped to reduce the reliance
on commodities exports - a major source of the dollar income needed for
debt repayments.
LITTLE PROGRESS
But there's been little progress on the steps needed to foster local
debt markets - pension reform, inflation targeting and making currencies
more flexible. Those markets that have emerged are small and with low
trading volumes, a similar story to many African equity markets.
Data from Frankfurt-based index provider Concerto Financial Solutions
shows 37 sub-Saharan African nations with outstanding local currency
debt of just under $260 billion by end-2016.
Of that $146 billion is from Africa's most developed economy, South
Africa, while Nigeria accounted for $40 billion - the only African
markets big and liquid enough to qualify for the GBI-EM index, widely
used by emerging debt investors
Concerto said stripping out South Africa, 16 African countries have
borrowed roughly $30 billion in bonds since 2007. In addition, China has
extended tens of billions of dollars in loans and some countries have
new debts to multilateral lenders.
"While Africa's current external debt ratios currently appear
manageable, their rapid growth in several countries is a concern and
requires action if a recurrence of the African debt crisis of the late
1980s and the 1990s is to be avoided," UNCTAD warned last year.
Other emerging markets in contrast have shifted almost entirely to
borrowing at home. Debt denominated in emerging currencies totals about
$15 trillion, or 80 percent of the developing world's bond stock.
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A man trades U.S. dollars for Ghanaian cedis at a currency exchange
office in Accra, Ghana, June 15, 2015. REUTERS/Francis Kokoroko/File
Photo
EFFORTS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
Investors do note some positives such as better regulation, growing pension
assets and longer 10-20 year bond tenors in many countries. Kenya recently sold
the world's first mobile phone-based bond to ordinary citizens
And Ghana last month auctioned $2.2 billion in cedi debt, the largest ever daily
transaction in sub-Saharan Africa. The deal attracted Michael Hasenstab,
Franklin Templeton's high-profile fund manager.
A
Ghanaian official said, speaking on condition of anonymity, the government would
focus this year on extending the maturity of domestic bonds and would not issue
Eurobonds.
Zambian finance minister Felix Mutati too said he wanted domestic borrowing to
be the first port of call in future, noting the 2017 budget was being financed
largely on domestic markets.
"The domestic market, you cannot just go and dip a bucket into it. It is a
delicate operation, the reason being that government borrowing can crowd out the
private sector," Mutati told Reuters, when asked why the government had
continued borrowing from overseas.
Some argue external borrowing is key in the early stages of a country's
development.
"The (foreign) borrowing has been invested in infrastructure projects that will
drive growth....it is setting the base for future economic performance," Rwandan
central bank governor John Rwangombwa said.
GROWING EXPONENTIALLY
There is no exact data on volumes in local markets. But Kenya, one of the bigger
markets with some $12 billion worth of Treasury bonds, trades the equivalent of
$16.5 million daily, stock exchange data shows. South African bonds trade $2
billion daily.
"Liquidity is never big enough for offshore investors to really play in and out
of the market," said Delphine Arrighi, a fund manager at Old Mutual Global
Investments.
But what is a headache for foreign investors has serious consequences for
countries and some are already apparent.
Lack of liquidity, transparency and hedging mechanisms contribute to keeping
local borrowing costs high. And external debt ratios have soared as African
currencies collapsed against the dollar from 2013. Zambian government debt has
doubled since 2012 and three-quarters is in foreign currency, up from 40 percent
back then.
Ghana's debt is over 60 percent of annual economic output, from 50 percent in
2005. Half is in dollars.
Mozambique's debt default last year may be the first of many, some fear
[nL5N17P4CL].
"The debt of these countries has just grown exponentially and so now they have
no hope of getting there with either a new round of debt relief or default and
restructuring," Carter of BNPIP said. "The priority right now is that they
absolutely must stop borrowing in dollars."
(Additional reporting by Duncan Miriri in Nairobi; Clement Uwiringiyimana in
Kigali; Chris Mfula in Lusaka and Matthew Mpoke Bigg in Accra; editing by Anna
Willard)
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