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Debt relief will hurt, not help Africa, banks warn

Wednesday, July 8th, 2020 00:00 | By
Treasury Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yatani. Photo/PD/File

MONEY:  Scrapping the debt of heavily indebted African nations will only come back to haunt them, according to two of the continent’s largest banks.

“To a great extent, forgiveness is a form of default, and, essentially then, what it does is that it distorts markets, so it is one area that we should all be conscious of the unintended consequences,” James Mwangi, CEO Equity Group Holdings, Kenya’s largest bank by market value, said in the same interview. “Essentially it talks about the creditworthiness of a country.”

China last week pledged to cancel some interest-free government loans for African nations and offered to rework commercial obligations as the world’s poorest continent grapples with how to handle the coronavirus pandemic. 

Debt suspension

The vow means debt suspension by the Group of 20 leading economies is gaining traction for all types of official funding, after an initial focus on Paris Club agreements.

“Forgiveness is not helpful because your debt is somebody’s else’s savings,” Ade Ayeyemi, chief executive officer of Lome, Togo-basedEcobank Transnational Inc., said in an interview at the Bloomberg Invest Global virtual conference on Monday.

“When you go to the market to borrow money, the market is looking at your current and past behavior.”

The G-20 in April agreed to provide the relief to help free up funds for more than 70 poor nations to deal with the pandemic, but the process has been slow, with many private creditors on the sidelines.

While a lockdown to contain the pandemic has impeded output and sales of most companies in the continent, it is boosting digital payments and helping governments achieve their goals of financial inclusion, said Ayeyemi, whose lender has operations in 33 countries across the continent. Ecobank is seeing 95 per cent cemnty of transactions done on digital platforms since the pandemic started, compared with 90 per cent previously.

The virus “has become the greatest accelerator of the adoption of digital,” he said.

Kenya said in May it will not seek a suspension of debt payments under a G20 initiative aimed at helping poor countries weather the Covid-19 pandemic, saying the terms of the deal were too restrictive.

Treasury Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yatani said he was also concerned about the impact that debt relief might have on the country ‘s credit rating. –Bloomberg and PD Reporter

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