Global Policy Forum

Debt Relief Alone Not Enough For LDCs

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By Gumisai Mutume

Dawn
October 27, 2000

As the Bretton Woods institutions embark on the final leg of a fast-track programme to forgive some of the debts of the poorest nations, they have been reminded that they will have to do more for a wider poverty strategy to succeed. A one-day conference in Washington that brought together World Bank and IMF officials, academics and journalists this week heard that the Enhanced Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative will do little to deal with growing poverty levels in developing countries.


While enhanced HIPC targets low-income nations, there are growing calls for another round of debt forgiveness to include middle-income countries such as Ecuador. The country's foreign minister Heinz Moeller says Ecuador was on its "way to becoming a HIPC" last year when a financial crisis saw the economy shrink by 7.5 per cent. "External debt has to do with the fact that there is no real free trade, some see free trade as a one way road from North to South but not from South to North," says Moeller, who wants the Bank and IMF to stop pushing the World Trade Organization's (WTO) agenda.

While Ecuador is one of the middle-income country, it is highly indebted and does not qualify for HIPC under present terms. Foreign debt makes up 162 per cent of the country's gross national product says Moeller. Moeller says debt forgiveness under HIPC "is not the only answer" especially if it occurs under the current world trade system that continues to keep developing countries out of the prime markets of industrialised countries.

HIPC was created in 1996. Following a period of little action, it was reformulated last year with the intention of providing deeper, faster relief to 41 of the world's poorest countries. So far some 10 countries have reached the qualification point, a figure the Bank and IMF say will reach 20 by year-end, freeing these countries of about $30 billion in debt. But the ineffectiveness of the current debt relief package will soon be realised, notes the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), because it has pushed poorer countries to open up their markets with little reciprocal action from wealthier nations. Enhanced HIPC is sold together with IMF/World Bank structural adjustment programmes.

In the 2000 Least Developed Countries (LDC) Report, UNCTAD says LDCs only attracted four percent of long-term capital flows to developing countries last year, despite having liberalised their trade regimes further.

IMF data show that trade liberalisation has advanced further in the LDCs than in other developing countries. Out of 43 LDCs for which information is available, 37 per cent have average import tariff rates of below 20 per cent, coupled with no or minor non-tariff barriers.

Jo Marie Griesgraber of Oxfam US says debt alone, under enhanced HIPC will not do the trick. In addition, rich countries have to pump in more aid and oversee long-term investment. "You can't have quick and dirty investment, that's not how development takes place," says Griesgraber.

Official development assistance (ODA) to LDCs in real per capita terms has dropped by 45 per cent since 1990 and is now back to the levels of the early 1970s. While private investment is rising, it is only targeted at a few of the poor countries. Skeptics say HIPC relief will not only come too late and too slowly, but the magnitude of assistance is also too little for a durable exit from the debt problem, and a transition to greater aid effectiveness.

In Mauritania, for example, debt service payments due in 1997-1998 were 184 per cent of total social expenditure. IMF figures show that payments due in 2000-2002 are projected to constitute 75 per cent of social expenditure. Mauritania has qualified for HIPC.

IMF deputy managing director Stanley Fisher says that people should not be hasty in their judgments over the current HIPC initiative as it is still in its infancy. Under enhanced HIPC, countries have to outline a poverty alleviation strategy in complex documents known as poverty reduction strategy papers before they can begin receiving assistance.

The Bank and IMF are now re-engineering the way they do business in poor countries by linking structural adjustment, debt relief and concessional lending to the formulation of what they term "nationally owned", participatory poverty reduction strategies.


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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.