Wealthy nation creditor club sees tide shifting as debt defaults peter
out
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[June 26, 2024] By
Libby George and Karin Strohecker
LONDON (Reuters) - The debt crisis risk that has overshadowed the global
economy for four years is beginning to recede, the Paris Club of rich
creditor nations said in its 2023 annual report on Wednesday.
A string of defaults, from Zambia to Sri Lanka, began in 2020 when the
COVID-19 pandemic triggered a series of economic shocks that continued
into last year with the fallout from Russia's war in Ukraine and rising
global interest rates compounding pressure on fragile finances in many
poor nations.
Now, the group said the tide is shifting, even as debt restructuring
talks loom in countries such as Ukraine and deadly protests erupt in
Kenya over tax rises aimed at reigning in government debt.
"The spectre of another major debt crisis is slowly receding," the group
said in a report released on the sidelines of its annual meeting in
Paris.
"But vigilance remains the order of the day – at a time when many
borrowers have significant external repayments falling due, limited
fiscal space and large investment needs."
The Paris Club, made of 22 official creditor nations, said the return of
Sub-Saharan African countries to Eurobond markets this year, a
stabilization in low-income country debt levels and a potential peak in
global interest rates gave cause of optimism.
However, several concerns lurk between the lines of the report,
including over whether the mechanism used to coordinate debt talks for
the world's poorest countries - dubbed the Common Framework - is fit for
purpose.
Global ratings agency S&P, in a contribution to the report, also flags
concerns over the very African Eurobond debt issuance that the Paris
Club points to as a reason for optimism.
S&P's Roberto Sifon Arevalo said countries worldwide are expected to
issue a "concerning level" of debt close to $11.5 trillion.
Ukraine, whose financial fate remains precarious after its proposed debt
restructuring hit the rocks earlier this month, is mentioned only in a
table of the report's 99 pages. The country was not on the agenda for
meeting, a Paris Club official said.
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A general view of the Colombo main port, Sri Lanka, May 13, 2024.
REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte/File Photo
CHINA COMPLICATIONS
The report also touches on the Paris Club's efforts to make debt
talks more transparent - including through its 2023 data-sharing
initiative with the World Bank that it said allows the Bank to
conduct large-scale reconciliation exercises.
But the World Bank's Manuela Francisco also warned that blurring
lines between creditor groups - with more state-controlled lenders
charging interest rates above 5% to low-income nations - continued
to stress their finances.
China, which has become the largest bilateral lender to a string of
low-income nations, has a complicated web of lending via
state-controlled entities that the world has struggled to unpick.
Xuan Changneng, deputy governor of People's Bank of China, did not
renew Beijing's request that multilateral lenders take losses on
their debt, but did urge them to provide more grants and lending
with a "deeper level of concessionality."
"They need to show more efforts to help countries in debt distress,"
he wrote.
The report also said talks were ongoing between Ethiopia and the
International Monetary Fund. Official creditors suspended Ethiopia's
debt repayments until it reached a deal for a Fund program.
"The Secretariat is hopeful that Ethiopia and the IMF will be able
to come to agreement on the terms of a programme over the course of
2024."
(Reporting By Libby George and Karin Strohecker; Editing by Tomasz
Janowski)
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