Private creditors reject blanket debt relief for African nations

Private creditor group holds debt of African countries whose finances are buckling under the strain of coronavirus.

African countries face a combined $44bn debt-servicing bill this year alone [File: Zohra Bensemra/Reuters]

Dismissing calls for blanket debt relief for African nations, 25 private creditors with more than $9 trillion in assets under management have banded together to influence debt restructuring efforts throughout the continent for countries whose finances have been sorely pressured by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Africa Private Creditor Working Group (AfricaPCWG) aims to “provide African Governments, the UNECA, the G20, the IMF and other Multilateral Development Banks (“MDBs”) a forum through which all stakeholders can engage transparently and constructively” with private creditors who hold debt issued by African governments and corporations, according to a statement released by the group on Friday.

African governments are fighting to manage the effects of the coronavirus, which the World Health Organisation has warned could infect 29 million to 44 million people on the continent in the first year if it is not contained.

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African countries also face a combined $44bn debt-servicing bill this year alone.

While the working group said it stands ready to provide support to multilateral and bilateral efforts to help “some of the world’s poorest countries to contain the economic impact of COVID-19”, its uppermost core engagement principal “is the belief that a one-size-fits-all solution will be counter-productive for the nations and people of Africa”.

This statement runs counter to calls by the G20 urging private creditors to match their proposal to allow the poorest nations to suspend debt payments for the rest of the year.

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Private creditors needed to accept they cannot make large profits from lending to poor countries, said Tim Jones, head of policy at Jubilee Debt Campaign, a UK-based charity working to end poverty.

“Unless debt payments to private lenders are cancelled, IMF loans and the G20’s debt suspension will be used to pay high interest to private lenders, an outrageous use of public money,” he said.

The G20 announced on April 15 an agreement with the Paris Club group of major creditor nations to freeze debt payments for the 77 poorest countries from May 1 to the end of the year, as requested, to free cash for the pandemic.

But the Institute of International Finance (IIF) trade association, which previously issued a rallying call to the private sector to join the initiative, earlier this month flagged creditors’ concerns to the IMF, World Bank and Paris Club about their involvement in such a move.

“A rushed, blanket approach developed during a time of crisis will put that crucial long-term access to capital at risk,” the AfricaPCWG said.

Farallon Capital Europe, Aberdeen Asset Management, Amia Capital, Greylock Capital Management and Pharo Management were among the members of AfricaPCWG.

It declined to name the other members.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies

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