Paris, France: After the epidemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Africa is facing decades-high levels of debt, but the international community is finding it difficult to come to an agreement on whether to continue providing financial assistance to the continent.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in a report Friday that public debt and inflation in sub-Saharan Africa were “at levels not seen in decades”.
According to the IMF, which has dropped its growth projection for sub-Saharan Africa to 3.6 per cent for this year, public debt in the area was 56 per cent of GDP at the end of last year, its highest level since the start of the 2000s.
The institution located in Washington claimed that the continent was experiencing a number of issues at once, including increased borrowing prices, the effects of the crisis in Ukraine, and a reduction in international help.
According to the IMF, borrowing costs in the area are three times higher than those in industrialised countries.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development reported this week that although funding to Ukraine increased last year, it decreased for Africa.
The problems facing Africa “could worsen debt problems — these are already high — and there could be a risk that more countries are moving from liquidity problems to the inability to roll over debt and solvency problems”, warned Catherine Pattillo, deputy director of the IMF’s Africa department, in an interview with AFP.
That could hit crucial services and dent future growth, she said, in a region where 132 million people face acute food insecurity.
“We are concerned that the funding squeeze could lead to more shortages of funding that could force countries to have to reduce spending for critical development needs, education, health,” Pattillo said.
“And that would have very negative implications for growth and development.”
‘Way too slow’
Twenty-two countries either face a high risk of or already have excessive debt, the World Bank said in a report published early this month.
Ghana and Zambia, which have both defaulted on loans, are among the 22, as are Malawi and Chad, which are receiving IMF help.
John Likumbi, a barber at Kabwata market in a middle-class district of Zambia’s capital Lusaka, is feeling the pinch.
He said he had been taking home less income over the past year compared to previous years, as people face a choice between spending on a haircut or buying food.
“On a bad day I stay without cutting anybody’s hair because people would rather spend the 30 kwacha (around $1.64) on buying pamela (a local term for a small packet of the staple cornmeal),” he told AFP.
“Previously I used to knock off with at least 300 kwacha but now I can even knock off with 30 kwacha,” Likumbi said.
Zambia is a case in point for the challenges facing the international community.
Negotiations on restructuring its debt — a key step towards unblocking the IMF’s aid plan for the country — have been underway for two years without any apparent success.
The process is part of the G20’s common framework for the restructuring of debt of the poorest nations which can often be blocked by China, now a key lender in Africa.
“It is going slow and way too slow,” Anna Bjerde, the World Bank’s managing director of operations, told AFP.
“We really believe this needs to be accelerated and it’s really about getting two major parties fully participating — it’s the official creditors and the private actor participation,” she added.
Promises have been made in the past and not kept, such as a pledge to increase financing to help poor countries adapt to climate change to $100 billion a year.
However, there are some signs of progress.
The IMF said Thursday that Beijing would respect its commitments on Zambia, while India, which this year heads the G20, said it hoped to see a debt restructuring agreement quickly for several countries including Ghana and Zambia.
The World Bank — during this week’s spring meetings in Washington which bring developed countries together with the lender and the IMF — announced a $50-billion hike in the lending capacity of its subsidiary, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
Other development bank reforms are also on the agenda this week, aimed at encouraging them to increasingly work together, lend more and see greater participation by the private sector.
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