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Jeddah - Yasmine El Tohamy - WASHINGTON: International Monetary Fund officials on Thursday warned that risks of a sovereign debt crisis sparked by the coronavirus pandemic will rise without changes to the international debt architecture, including more transparency for government borrowing.
In a blog post and speech, IMF officials called for the G20 debt service suspension initiative to be extended for another 12 months until the end of 2021, and a common restructuring approach across all official bilateral creditors, including China.
A new IMF research paper also laid out options for improving debt transparency and restructurings.
“A pandemic-induced systemic debt crisis cannot be ruled out,” IMF First Deputy Managing Director Geoffrey Okamoto said in remarks prepared for delivery to a Peterson Institute for International Economics online event. “The longer the problem is postponed, the worse it will become.”
IMF researchers said in a new paper published on Thursday that prior to the coronavirus pandemic, the existing legal architecture governing sovereign debt restructurings had worked fairly well, especially compared with the 1980s, when Latin American debt restructurings dragged on for years, often blocked by small numbers of bondholders.
Recent innovations including enhanced Collective Action Clauses, which allow larger majorities of bondholders to impose new terms on holdouts, have facilitated faster restructurings, they said, citing Argentina’s agreement a month ago with creditors to restructure nearly $65 billion in international bonds.
But a large stock of outstanding international sovereign bonds, often in low-income countries, lack such clauses, and non-bonded debt typically does not include such majority restructuring provisions, making it difficult to restructure debt that becomes unsustainable.
Private-sector participation in the debt service suspension initiative has failed to materialize, limiting relief for poor countries hit hard by the coronavirus.
IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva, in a blog posting, and Okamoto both called for wider adoption of enhanced collective action clauses.
Okamoto said that significant amounts of debt are owed to creditors outside the Paris Club, “and don’t follow its procedures or have any common framework,” a reference to debt issued to China and Chinese state-owned enterprises under the Belt and Road infrastructure drive.
While they did not name China, they called for increased debt transparency so that creditors know what debts are owed by countries under what terms, which would help encourage debt restructurings.
They also called for all official bilateral creditors, Paris Club or not, to agree on a common approach to restructuring official bilateral debts, with a common term sheet requiring debtors to transparently lay out debts and seek comparable terms for official and private debt.
“Such an approach would seek to ensure information sharing and fair burden sharing across all creditors. By doing so, it would likely raise participation and avoid costly delays,” Georgieva said.
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