Global Policy Forum

Group Calls for Debt Swaps to Ease Burden

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By Lewis Machipisa

Inter Press Service
October 19, 2001

In Mozambique, one in four children dies before the age of five years due to infectious diseases, yet the government spends four times more on debt servicing than on health care. Zambia spends 37 million U.S. dollars on primary education. In the same year it devotes 1.3 billion dollars to debt payments.


Such grim statistics are found in much of African countries. Debt repayment is proving to be the greatest obstacles to the continent's development and poverty reduction.

Faced with such a problem, African groups on debt are now calling for a debt swap initiative to ease the continent's crippling debt crisis.

Under the initiative, a creditor donates the debts to a non- governmental organisation that then uses the money to carry our projects in the debtor country.

''The debtor government's commitment remains but with the payment in local currency at agreed rates and within specific timeframes,'' says Twisema Muyoya of MWENGO, a Non-governmental Organisation (NGO) working in the area or international trade and development.

''Instead of money going to pay debt, can't it be diverted and comes back to develop local communities,'' says Muyoya.

''If the programme is right, the debt being converted become a development resources as relief is not provided to the government but to the development process and the people,'' adds Muyoya. ''Resources mobilised from debt swaps will have to be applied in strategic areas in order to maximise impact.''

According to the Africa Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD), Sub-Sahara Africa's debt to both multilateral and bilateral creditors stands at around 370 billion U.S. dollars.

It continues to rise, not because of any significant additional borrowing but mainly as a result of the cost of servicing the debt.

Every day in 1999, 128 million dollars was transferred from the poorest countries to creditor nations in debt payments, according to AFRODAD. Of this, 23 million dollars was from sub-Saharan Africa. Zimbabwe for example, paid a third of this amount in 1999.

''In these circumstances, it is simply not possible to speak of any significant measure of development, for as long as African countries are obliged to allocate so much of their lean resources to debt servicing,'' says Eunice Mafundikwa of the African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD).

''It cannot be denied that Africa's debt crisis is one of the major causes for the economic crisis facing the continent today,'' says Mafundikwa.

Of the 41 countries classified as Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs), 33 are in sub-Sahara Africa. It is also these very poor countries that not only owe the most but also have the least capability to repay the debt.

According to the United Nations, ''up to 40 percent of African countries' government revenue is now being allocated to servicing foreign debt to the detriment of health, education and other essential social services.''

For example, sub-Saharan Africa spends twice as much as on debt servicing as on basic health services. It also spends 6.1 percent of Gross National Product (GNP) on education and five percent of GNP on debt servicing.

''The west's response to the debt problem has been to hatch up plan after plan, initiative after initiative. But none of these have adequately addressed the problem and the bulk of the crisis remains unresolved,'' observes Mafundikwa. ''The result is the deterioration of services and more indebtedness.''

''Debt cancellation is therefore, the only effective way to end poverty and put Africa on the path to continued development,'' says Mafundikwa.

According to the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), ''Africa's debts are too high to afford and debt relief on a more inclusive and more effective basis than hitherto remains essential to the continent's ability to meet minimum development needs''.

Approximately 30 percent of new aid money in sub-Saharan Africa is directed away from social services and redirected towards servicing debt payments to mainly the World bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Sub-Saharan Africa governments owe foreign creditors an average of almost 400 dollars for every person on a continent where the average annual wage is less than 400 dollars per person.

If each of Zimbabwe's 13 million people, for example, were to pay back the debt owed by the government, each would pay 667 U.S. dollars, according to Simba Munyanyi, of the Zimbabwe coalition on debt and development (Zimcodd).

According to Munyanyi, over the past three decades, the public debt has grown in size and impact, making it one of the three main external factors that constrain Africa's development.

In a new book on the social effects and politics of public debt in Zimbabwe, Zimcodd blames structural adjustment programmes for the rising debt. For Africa, the debt crisis provided a rational for bail out strategies through the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank designed structural adjustment programmes, prompting some debt restructuring proposals by creditor nations.

But, after dozens of such programmes in sub-Saharan Africa, the volume of total external debt as a percentage of export income tripled from 102 percent in 1978 to 326 percent in 1986. It also tripled as a percentage of gross national product from 243 percent to 74.4 percent, according to Zimcodd.

By 1997, sub-Saharan Africa owed creditors 235.4 billion compared with 84 billion dollars in 1980, making the countries bankrupt.

''The loans by IMF and World Bank added to the debt burden on top of very strict economic programmes in order to reschedule debts or lend more money to bankrupt government,'' says Zimcodd.

''We also have to look at the legitimacy of the debt we are paying. Some of it was accrued under military dictators who have long died and current governments have to pay for it. Is that fair?'' wonders Muyoya.


More Information on Debt Relief

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FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.