Audio By Carbonatix
More than 30% of emerging and developing countries are at or near debt distress, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, Kristalina Georgieva, has revealed.
For low-income countries that number is 60%.
According to her, the tightening financial conditions and exchange rate depreciations has escalated the debt service burden which she described a harsh – and for some countries – unbearable burden.
Speaking at the hybrid meeting of the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors, Madam Georgieva said the outlook of the global economy has darkened significantly, and uncertainty is exceptionally high, adding, “downside risks about which the IMF had previously warned have now materialised”.
She therefore wants a strong global leadership to tackle the scourge of high debt, which has reached multiyear highs.
“The war in Ukraine has intensified, exerting added pressures on commodity and food prices. Global financial conditions are tightening more than previously anticipated. And continuing pandemic-related disruptions and renewed bottlenecks in global supply chains are weighing on economic activity.”
“As a result, later this month, we will project a further downgrade to global growth for both 2022 and 2023 in our World Economic Outlook Update. Moreover, downside risks will remain and could deepen—especially if inflation is more persistent—requiring even stronger policy interventions which could potentially impact growth and exacerbate spillovers particularly to emerging and developing countries. Countries with high debt levels and limited policy space will face additional strains. Look no further than Sri Lanka as a warning sign”, she added.
Emerging and developing countries have also been experiencing sustained capital outflows for four months in a row. They now suffer the risk of reversing three decades of catching up with advanced economies and instead falling further behind.
3 priorities to navigate challenging environment
The MD of IMF said first countries must do everything in their power to bring inflation down, adding, “failure to do so could risk the recovery and further damage living standards for vulnerable people”.
She expressed excitement that central banks are stepping up their game.
“Monetary policy is increasingly synchronised: more than three-quarters of central banks have raised interest rates and have done so 3.8 times. Central bank independence is critical for the success of these policy actions, as is clear communication and a data-driven approach.”
Secondly, she said fiscal policy must help but not hinder central bank efforts to tame inflation.
“With growth slowing down, some people will need more support, not less. So fiscal policy needs to reduce debt while providing targeted measures to support vulnerable households facing renewed shocks, especially from high energy or food prices”.
Thirdly, Kristalina Georgieva said, a fresh impetus for global cooperation will be critical to confront the multiple crises the world is facing. We need G20 leadership particularly to address the risks from food insecurity and high debt.
Latest Stories
-
Painful memories, hard lessons: Why Ghana’s backroom team matters more than ever
10 minutes -
Vote-buying has become a ‘soft culture’ in Ghanaian politics – Political analyst
10 minutes -
Mahama fully involved in party decisions – Kwakye Ofosu dismisses rift claims
22 minutes -
Baba Jamal’s recall not targeted, decision based on allegations – Kwakye Ofosu
25 minutes -
OccupyGhana demands crackdown on intra-party vote buying
25 minutes -
Suame Interchange: Government spending extra GH¢3bn to build bypass – Agbodza
32 minutes -
Cyber Security Authority rallies stakeholders for Africa Safer Internet Day
47 minutes -
Cybersecurity threats in Ghana: A comprehensive analysis
1 hour -
Alhaji Seidu Abagre granted GH¢100,000 bail
1 hour -
NPP selects Baba Ali Yussif for Ayawaso East by-election
1 hour -
VFS Global warns against visa appointment fraud as travel demand surges in 2026
1 hour -
CBG launches ‘Health Train’ with free community health screening
1 hour -
Andrews Bediako urges probe to include assembly technocrats in galamsey extortion
1 hour -
Abu Trica sues Interior Minister, AG, NACOC, FBI and EOCO; demands GH₵10m in damages
2 hours -
Nkwanta South MCE commissions new classroom block at Mmen Akura JHS
2 hours
