LONDON: Global public debt surged to a record $92 trillion in 2022 as governments borrowed to counter crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, with the burden being felt acutely by developing countries, a UN report said.
Domestic and external debt worldwide has increased more than five times in the last two decades, outstripping the rate of economic growth, with gross domestic product only tripling since 2002, according to the Wednesday report, released in the run up to a G20 finance ministers and central bank governors’ meeting on July 14-18.
“Markets may seem not be suffering — yet. But people are,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told reporters. “Some of the poorest countries in the world are being forced into a choice between servicing their debt, or serving their people.”
Developing countries owe almost 30 percent of the global public debt, of which 70 percent is represented by China, India and Brazil. Fifty-nine developing countries face a debt-to-GDP ratio above 60 percent — a threshold indicating high levels of debt.
“Debt has been translating into a substantial burden for developing countries due to limited access to financing, rising borrowing costs, currency devaluations and sluggish growth,” the UN report added.
Furthermore, the international financial architecture made access to financing for developing countries both inadequate and expensive, the UN said, pointing to net interest debt payments exceeding 10 percent of revenues for 50 emerging economies worldwide.
“In Africa, the amount spent on interest payments is higher than spending on either education or health,” the report found with 3.3 billion people living in countries that spend more on debt interest payments than on health or education.
“Countries are facing the impossible choice of servicing their debt or serving their people.”
Private creditors, such as bondholders and banks, represent 62 percent of developing countries’ total external public debt.
In Africa, this creditor participation grew from 30 percent in 2010 to 44 percent in 2021, while Latin America has the highest ratio of private creditors holding external government debt for any region at 74 percent.
The UN said multilateral lenders should expand their financing, with measures such as a temporary suspension of International Monetary Fund surcharges — commissions charged to borrowers using its credit lines extensively — and increased financing access for countries in debt distress.
A debt workout mechanism is also needed “to address the slow progress of the G20 Common Framework”, the authors said, without providing any further details on how that mechanism should work.
The debt treatment framework was adopted by the G20 major economies and official creditors in October 2020, and aims to include non-Paris club members such as China in debt relief.