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Former Mauritian president urges BRICS support
Former Mauritian president urges BRICS support

eNCA

time04-07-2025

  • Business
  • eNCA

Former Mauritian president urges BRICS support

SEVILLE, SPAIN - As global leaders prepare to gather for the BRICS summit, this weekend, the focus turns to Africa's role within this powerful bloc of emerging economies. Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, are not just strategic allies, they are also key trading partners for the continent. READ | G20 president SA warns global turmoil hurts poorer nations China alone accounts for over R4.935 trillion rand in trade with Africa over the past 15 years. But beyond trade figures lies a bigger question: how can BRICS support Africa's growth in a way that ensures the continent retains the value of its resources? To answer this question eNCA spoke to former Mauritian president Ameenah Gurib-Fakim.

To restructure or not: Kenya's debt dilemma
To restructure or not: Kenya's debt dilemma

Zawya

time05-05-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

To restructure or not: Kenya's debt dilemma

Debt restructuring is an issue very close to the heart of Ameenah Gurib-Fakim, the first woman to be elected President of Mauritius. For her, the push for debt restructuring is one of the ways to achieve Africa's sovereignty. She contends that the call for restructuring is a call for fairness.'There is a call for addressing the dignity of these countries, so that they are not perceived to be going around with a begging bowl but really operating in a system where there is fairness in terms of allocation of loans, or whatever it is which would go towards the development in the country,' she said recently in Nairobi. Gurib-Fakim was one of the former African heads of state who launched the African Leaders Debt Relief Initiative (Aldri), which aims to push for an overhaul of the global lending system to unlock debt relief and fairer borrowing terms for developing countries, particularly in Africa.'We just don't want flag independence, we want true independence,' she said during her visit to Nairobi to attend the CGIAR Science Week. Days before her visit, Kenya's National Treasury was forced to withdraw a social media post suggesting that Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi had held talks with Chinese officials on the possibility of restructuring Kenya's debt from China. Spooked investors, the issue of debt restructuring has been a sensitive one for Kenya, particularly after Nairobi entered the international capital markets by issuing its first Eurobond in June 2014. Since then, Kenya has found itself dictated by the whims of the global financial markets, as any sentiment, including from the headlines of local dailies, is likely to spook investors. When investors are scared, they demand a higher yield to compensate for the increased risk of default by the borrower. A higher yield means that when the country goes back to the market to borrow and repay a maturing debt, its cost of borrowing goes up. Due to the adverse effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, countries such as Ethiopia, Zambia and Ghana have sought debt restructuring under the G20's Common Framework for Debt Treatments beyond the Debt Service Suspension Initiative. Read: Ethiopia's road to debt restructuringGhana has restructured its debt. In 2022, Accra defaulted on most of its external debt, including Eurobonds. In January 2025, Ghana announced that all 25 participating creditor countries had signed a memorandum of understanding with the Official Creditors Committee (OCC), providing a framework for implementation of the terms through bilateral agreements. This agreement aims for a debt service relief of $2.8 billion over the life of the IMF-supported programme. Kenya, whose external position was also affected by the pandemic, had the opportunity to restructure but refused to do so, a snub that scholar Michael Chege recently described as 'arrogance.''I know we want to have a reputation as a country that does not have debt restructuring,' said Prof Chege in a recent interview, adding that in 2022 he watched in utter disbelief as Kenya missed an opportunity to restructure its debt and get some breathing space. The country had approached the Paris Club of creditors three times since 1990 to seek debt relief and a rescheduling of its external debt. Kenya has also received debt relief from the London Club creditors. In 1998, the London Club creditors rescheduled Kenya's debts amounting to $70 million over 10 years, including a three-year grace period, at prevailing market interest rates. In 2003/04, about $23 million of debt owed to London Club creditors was rescheduled over two years at prevailing market interest rates. Some of the bilateral debt cancellations that Kenya has received have come from Finland, the Netherlands and China in various past years. In 2006, Kenya entered into a debt-for-development swap agreement with the Italian government amounting to $44 million.'Refinance expensive debt'Today, as much as the country needs debt restructuring, as loan repayments continue to take a big chunk of Kenya's revenues, the role of international investors and credit rating companies present a dilemma. Ken Gichinga, an economist, thinks the debt restructuring should not be one of the routes out of Kenya's financial straits.'As global interest rates continue to drop, there is an opportunity to refinance expensive debt with cheaper options,' he said.'This is the only viable option. Any other strategy might spook investors and raise the risk profile of the country,' added Gichinga, noting that, ultimately, the real solution lies in changing the tax policy. Yet restructuring of debt has always been in the cards for Kenya. In October 2023, the then Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua told the AFP that President William Ruto would travel to China and seek 'more time to repay the debt slowly' and $1 billion to complete the road projects delayed by financing shortfalls. In the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic, the former President Uhuru Kenyatta's government came up with the Kenya Post-Covid Economic Recovery Strategy that included debt restructuring, noting that the country had limited space for additional borrowing.'To address this, the National Treasury will prepare a debt restructuring strategy covering commercial and bilateral creditors. This will ease fiscal pressure from expensive external commercial debt servicing and decrease issuance of shorter-dated domestic government paper to reduce refinancing risk and the public debt burden,' the Treasury said. But the country has continued to pay most of its debts, including a $2 billion Eurobond that matured in June last year. Kenya's debt is in high distress, having moved from moderate, as the country breached most of the critical debt sustainability indicators, including external debt service as a ration of income from exports. © Copyright 2022 Nation Media Group. All Rights Reserved. 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Former African leaders launch debt relief drive for poor nations
Former African leaders launch debt relief drive for poor nations

Yahoo

time27-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Former African leaders launch debt relief drive for poor nations

The high debt saddling the world's poorest countries needs an urgent reset to avoid multiple crises, African leaders said Thursday as they launched an initiative for debt relief and fairer borrowing terms. The African Leaders Debt Relief Initiative, signed on the sidelines of a G20 finance meeting in South Africa, will push for a revamp of the global lending system to unlock debt relief and favourable borrowing terms for developing countries. "More than half of the African population live in countries that are spending more on interest payments than education, health or climate," said former Mauritius president Ameenah Gurib-Fakim, one of seven former African leaders who have put their weight behind the drive. Most African countries will "need significant debt relief to unlock the necessary funding" in order to reach targets outlined by the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement on climate change, she said. Low and middle-income countries are spending a staggering $1.4 trillion on debt servicing, with $406 billion going solely to interest payments, according to a statement from the new initiative. The mounting debt costs are eating into the funds that would otherwise be used to better tackle poverty, cope with climate calamities and other challenges, the leaders said. South Africa has made debt relief for the world's poorest countries a priority of its G20 presidency this year. It is the first time the G20 meeting is being held on African soil but talks have been dominated by concerns about the aggressive stance of the new US administration which has cut foreign aid, threatened tariffs and kept its top foreign and finance officials away from the South African meetings. South Africa's G20 presidency offered "a unique opportunity to lead the charge on debt relief," said former Nigeria vice president Yemi Osinbajo. The average debt ratio in sub-Saharan countries hit record highs of almost 60 percent of annual economic output by the end of 2022, according to the Washington-based International Monetary Fund. Last year, Zambia signed a debt deal with its foreign lenders, providing financial relief to the first African nation to default after the Covid pandemic. Joyce Banda, former president of Malawi, told reporters that by 2030, developing nations will need to invest up to $6.4 trillion annually to achieve sustainable development. 'However, this goal remains unattainable given their overwhelming debt obligations,' she said. str/ho/br/rl

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