Despite an economic recovery, borrowing will stay elevated
because of high debt rollover requirements and war in Ukraine,
the ratings agency said in an annual note.
While 137 countries will borrow an equivalent of $10.4 trillion
in 2022, an estimated 30% lower than 2020, the overall figure is
one-third higher than average borrowing between 2016 and 2019,
S&P said.
"Tightening monetary conditions will push up government funding
costs," S&P analysts said.
"This will pose additional difficulties to sovereigns that have
been unable to restart growth, reduce reliance on foreign
currency financing, and where interest bills are already
critically high on average."
Borrowing in the economies of emerging Europe, Middle East and
Africa (EMEA) will rise $253 billion to the equivalent of $3.4
trillion by the end of the year, S&P said in an accompanying
report on Thursday.
Egypt, which has recently sought IMF assistance, is set to
overtake Turkey as the region's largest issuer of sovereign
debt, with $73 billion worth of bond sales, S&P analysts
forecast.
Among larger countries globally, Kenya, Egypt and Japan have the
biggest share of debt that needs to be rolled over this year,
the analysts said, pointing to short-term debt of 26% and 30% of
total debt stocks in Egypt and Kenya respectively.
Commercial debt in EMEA emerging markets is set to increase to
37% of GDP from 31% in 2016, boosted by pandemic-related costs,
a rise in commercial borrowing in Oman and Saudi Arabia and
"persistently high fiscal deficits" in Egypt and Romania.
Across emerging markets, JPMorgan analysts said in a note on
Monday, the corporate default rate could reach 8.5% this year,
more than double the 3.9% they expected before Russia invaded
Ukraine and the highest since the global financial crisis.
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee and Rachel Savage; Additional
Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Danilo Masoni and Clarence
Fernandez)
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