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Africa is in the middle of a debt crisis. The level of debt has reached record levels, and it is holding back development in countries across the continent. How did debt become such a problem? DW's Tomi Oladipo explains.
Transcript
00:00Across Africa, governments are running out of money, and debt is a major reason why.
00:05As a government, spending 5-10% of your income on interest payments is generally considered manageable,
00:12but for roughly half of Africa, it's now between 20-30%,
00:16and that leaves far less money for essential services like health or education.
00:21Public debt has risen sharply.
00:24In 2010, African governments owed about a third of their yearly economic output.
00:28By 2020, that figure was closer to 60%, and in places like Ghana, Zambia, or Kenya, even higher.
00:36Now the bills are due, and many countries can't pay.
00:40So how did we get here?
00:42In the 2010s, there was a lot of borrowing.
00:44Many countries took advantage of low global interest rates to get funds for major infrastructure projects and public services.
00:51The idea was simple.
00:53Borrow money cheaply, build roads, ports, and power plants,
00:56grow the economy, and pay it back later.
00:59And how does debt work?
01:01A government sells bonds to investors, basically IOUs.
01:04The government receives the cash, pays interest yearly, and returns the full amount on a set date.
01:10For example, if you borrow $2 billion, you might pay $100 million a year in interest over, say, 10 years,
01:17and return the full $2 billion at the end.
01:19Who are the lenders?
01:22It used to be mostly Western governments, the World Bank, and the IMF.
01:26But after the 2008 global financial crisis, they pulled back.
01:30So African countries turned to more costly private lenders and China.
01:35The higher interest rates that's brought have to do with perception,
01:38because it's not just about whether you can pay what you owe, but about whether lenders think you can.
01:43Credit rating agencies grade countries on how risky they are to lend to.
01:49Lower grades mean paying higher interest.
01:52Many African countries are labeled high risk,
01:54even when their economies look similar to others with better scores.
01:58And that's often influenced by stereotypes and negative media coverage.
02:03Now, remember all that borrowing in the 2010s?
02:06Vorrow cheap, invest, grow, and pay back?
02:08Well, a lot's happened since then.
02:10The pandemic, the war in Ukraine, inflation, rising global interest rates,
02:15and shocks to the commodity markets, which African countries rely on.
02:19So they're not earning enough money to pay their old loans,
02:21and new borrowing is more expensive.
02:24Meanwhile, domestic costs are rising, populations are growing,
02:28climate disasters are hitting harder, and people need health care and education.
02:33So a few countries have defaulted and had to enter negotiations to find a way out.
02:38Nine countries are in debt distress, meaning they're struggling to pay,
02:42while more are at risk.
02:45So South Africa was able to, in partnership with the EU,
02:50get a G20 declaration on debt within the finance track,
02:55which was not an easy task given the current context as well.
03:01That declaration acknowledges that there is a need for urgent reform of the G20 Common Framework
03:07that allows, you know, timely and effective resolution of debt challenges,
03:14not just for African countries, but for developing countries more broadly.
03:18But also what that means is being able to implement those solutions
03:24allows African countries to then open up their fiscal space
03:29to be able to channel more resources in critical sectors like education and health,
03:34where many of these countries have had to make a choice between debt service payments
03:39and meeting those development objectives.
03:42So the question isn't whether African countries can repay these debts,
03:45but what they must sacrifice to do so.
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