Larry Elliott Economics editor 

Debt payments by countries most vulnerable to climate crisis soar

Exclusive: level at highest in more than 30 years, say campaigners, who want ‘rapid and effective’ relief scheme
  
  

Stationary engineless boats lie idle on a dry inland lake in Africa
Debt Justice says its report shows the need for comprehensive debt relief so that poor countries can invest in measures to tackle the climate crisis. Photograph: Amos Gumulira/AFP/Getty

Debt payments by the 50 countries most vulnerable to the climate crisis have doubled since the start of the coronavirus pandemic and now stand at their highest level in more than three decades, campaigners have warned.

The Debt Justice charity said countries at the highest risk of being affected by global heating were paying 15.5% of government revenues to external creditors – up from less than 8% before Covid-19 and 4% at their lowest recent point in 2010.

Using data from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, the charity said its new report showed the urgent need for comprehensive debt relief so that poor countries could invest in measures to tackle the climate crisis.

Record levels of debt are crushing the ability of the most vulnerable countries to tackle the climate emergency,” said Heidi Chow, the executive director of Debt Justice.

“We need a rapid and effective debt relief scheme to cancel debts down to a sustainable level. The UK can play its part by legislating to ensure private lenders take part in international debt relief agreements.”

For the 50 countries covered in the report, 38% of their external interest payments are to private lenders, 35% to multilateral institutions, 14% to China and 13% to other governments.

Two rounds of comprehensive debt relief in the late 1990s and mid-2000s resulted in a sharp fall in the debt burdens of poor countries but repayments rose steadily in the 2010s before soaring from 2020 onwards.

Debt Justice cited several reasons for the new debt crisis. One is that the debt suspension scheme agreed by creditors at the start of the pandemic has ended, and the suspended debts are now due to be repaid.

Borrowers have also been hit by a rise in global interest rates from the rock-bottom levels of the 2010s. Also, the strong value of the US dollar has increased the relative size of external debt payments (which are mainly owed in dollars).

A 10-day conference focusing on countries’ ability to finance climate action, including through climate finance and unsustainable debt levels, begins in Bonn on Monday, and Debt Justice said the example of drought-afflicted Zambia underlined the need for action.

After three and a half years of negotiations, the Zambian government has recently sealed a debt restructuring deal with some – but not all – of its private lenders.

Zambia’s debt deal allows for large increases in debt payments if the economy does better than expected, but there is no equivalent clause to reduce payments in the event of a shock, such as a drought. Under the terms of the debt deal, Zambia will have to pay bondholders $450m (£353m) this year.

Tim Jones, the head of policy at Debt Justice, said: “It is outrageous that Zambia’s creditors have demanded a deal where they get huge increases in debt payments if things go well, but no losses if Zambia is hit by disasters such as droughts. The $450m going to bondholders this year is money which could have been used to respond to the national disaster.

“As well as debt cancellation, rich countries urgently need to pay their climate debt by delivering grant-based, adequate climate finance.”

 

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