October 11, 2021: My Foreword to the International Debt Statistics 2022 Report
The COVID-19 pandemic brought unprecedented challenges to low- and middle-income countries. Even prior to the onset of the crisis, rising public debt levels and heightened debt vulnerabilities were already a concern in many countries. These vulnerabilities increased dramatically in 2020. The crisis drove up financing needs and thereby public borrowing, while weakening individual countries’ economic fundamentals and capacity to service and repay public debt. The risk now is that too many countries will emerge from the COVID-19 crisis with a large debt overhang that could take years to manage.
The external debt stock of low- and middle-income countries in 2020 rose, on average, 5.6 percent to $8.7 trillion. However, for many countries the increase was in double digits. The external debt stock of countries eligible for the Group of Twenty (G-20) Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) rose, on average, 12 percent to $860 billion and in some of them by 20 percent or more. For most countries the rise in external indebtedness was not matched by the growth of gross national income (GNI) and exports.
A large-scale shift in the approach to debt transparency is needed to help countries assess and manage their external debt risks and work toward sustainable debt levels and terms. This is particularly urgent given the scheduled expiration of the DSSI at the end of 2021. The World Bank has long played a leading role in the compilation and dissemination of external debt statistics. International Debt Statistics, the World Bank’s flagship publication on external debt data, is the most important source of verifiable information on the external debt of low- and middle-income countries and offers a unique dataset that can shape the solutions that will be needed in the coming years.
International Debt Statistics 2022 raises the bar on debt transparency. The 2020 dataset has been expanded to provide more detailed and disaggregated data on external debt than ever before. The data now break down each borrowing country’s external debt stock into the amounts owed to each official and private creditor, the currency composition, and the financial terms of the loans extended. In addition, for DSSI-eligible countries, the dataset includes the debt service deferred in 2020 by each bilateral creditor and the projected monthly debt-service payments that will be owed on this debt. More importantly, the borrower classification now presents the Central Bank as a separate borrower entity. Beginning with 2020, the data increasingly reflect external borrowing by state-owned enterprises, and most 2020 data are actual, not estimated, transactions.
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The transparency of data on debt must evolve to keep pace with an ever-changing creditor landscape and with new and increasingly complex debt-like instruments and data requirements. We are working hard to be able to capture all debt instruments, including external borrowing by state owned enterprises, Central Bank deposits, and currency swaps. We are also collecting information on loan guarantees and collateral arrangements.
Reliable and comprehensive debt data are the cornerstone of good development outcomes. Borrowing allows governments and growing private sectors to mobilize the resources they need to invest in innovation, health systems, education, and infrastructure and build durable economic recoveries. Debt transparency invites new investment and helps safeguard long-term sustainability. The World Bank is committed to working with governments and partners to achieve that outcome—by continually improving debt data coverage, quality, timeliness, and transparency.
-David
Read the full IDS 2022 report here.
multinationals working inside
2 年Statistic with analysis and solution for
Founder & CEO of Suss Global
3 年Never Give Up!
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3 年Thank to the World Bank Group for the data and report. It will serve as tool in fiscal policy creation and strategy implementation.
SJOGUN MIRA HAN ABSOLJUT
3 年What about our business?
Manager Grants and Program Operations at Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund
3 年WB should continue with poor and underdevelop countries and introduce new approaches for poor sigments of societies.