ONDON: The record number of developing nations at risk of a debt crisis will be high on the agenda next week when central bankers, finance ministers and political leaders convene for the World Bank Group and International Monetary Fund (IMF) spring meetings.
Ballooning inflation, escalating borrowing costs and a strong dollar have made repaying loans and raising money significantly more expensive for dozens of developing nations, pushing several into default last year.
Below is a look at countries that face a debt crunch or have already defaulted on international loans.
EGYPT
Egypt’s tourism-dependent economy was hammered by the one-two punch of COVID-19 and soaring food and energy prices, leaving it short of dollars and struggling to pay rising debts.
Cairo secured a new US$3 billion IMF package in December by committing to a flexible currency, a greater role for the private sector and a range of monetary and fiscal reforms.
Import and currency restrictions have weighed on economic activity, and a foreign currency shortage continues despite three sizable devaluations since March 2022 that halved the value of the pound. Inflation stands now at a more than five-year high above 30 per cent.
EL SALVADOR
El Salvador cleared a $600 million bond payment hurdle in January. The Central American country has roughly $6.4 billion in outstanding Eurobonds. While the next payment is not due until 2025, concerns about El Salvador’s high debt service costs and its financing plans and fiscal policies have pressed its bonds into deeply distressed territory.
The country’s move to make bitcoin legal tender in September 2021 effectively closed the doors to IMF financing. However, the risks over El Salvador’s embrace of bitcoin “have not materialised”, the IMF
acknowledged.
Ghana is in its worst economic crisis in a generation, spending over 40 per cent of government revenues on debt payments last year. In January, it became the fourth country to seek a rework under the Common Framework.
The West African country secured a US$3 billion agreement with the IMF in December, though it still needs to get financing assurances from bilateral lenders to clinch the final sign-off. The cocoa, gold and oil producer has already reached a deal to write down domestic debt and last week kicked off formal debt talks with international bondholders.
LEBANON
Lebanon’s financial system began unravelling in 2019 after decades of mismanagement and corruption, and in early 2020 it defaulted. Lebanon has had neither a head of state nor a fully empowered cabinet since Oct 31.
It reached a provisional US$3 billion IMF agreement in April 2022, but the fund recently warned Lebanon was “in a very dangerous situation” due to delays on a range of reforms, including banking and exchange rate overhauls. Beirut devalued the official exchange rate for the first time in 25 years in February. Last month its central bank said it would begin selling unlimited amounts of US dollars to halt spiralling devaluation.
Malawi is grappling with foreign exchange shortages and a budget deficit of some 1.32 trillion kwacha (US$1.30 billion), or 8.7 per cent of GDP.
The donor-dependent southern African nation is trying to restructure its debt in order to secure more funding from the IMF, which approved emergency funds in November.
PAKISTAN
Months of political and economic turmoil, worsened by crippling floods last year and record inflation, put Pakistan in the danger zone.
China agreed to refinance US$1.8 billion already credited to Pakistan’s central bank, and last month rolled over a US$2 billion loan that had matured earlier in March, providing relief during Pakistan’s acute balance of payments crisis.
But talks with the IMF for a delayed US$1.1 billion loan tranche, part of US$6.5 billion bailout agreed in 2019, have dragged on and foreign exchange reserves have fallen to less than four weeks of imports.
Source: Reuters