Multilateral Debt:
The Unbearable Burden
Volume 6, Number 37
November 2001
By Soren Ambrose, 50 Years Is Enough Network
Editors: Tom Barry (IRC) and Martha
Honey (IPS)
 
37ifmultidebt.pdf
Key Points
- World Bank figures for 1999 show that $128 million is transferred
daily from the 62 most impoverished countries to wealthy countries,
and that for every dollar countries receive in grant aid, they repay
$13 on old debts.
- The IMF and the World Bank are preferred creditors who
gain power over impoverished countries as the amounts owed to them increase.
- Structural adjustment programs, which reorient economies to benefit
corporate interests while reducing spending on social programs and locally
oriented production, are imposed by IFIs on severely indebted countries.
Multilateral debt is that portion of a countrys external debt burden
owed to international financial institutions (IFIs) such as the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. For most of the worlds impoverished
countries, multilateral debt looms larger than other debts because of
the status of IFIs as preferred creditors assigned them by
the Group of 7 (G-7) industrialized countries. These same countries control
the most votes at the IFIs and use the resulting leverage to insist on
orthodox austerity and free trade policies. Because of the
preferred creditor status of the IFIs, payments of multilateral debt takes
priority over private and bilateral (government-to-government) debt.
Governments and private creditors often write off debts. But the IFIs
contend that their bylaws prohibit them from granting debt relief or canceling
debts. Borrowing governments have special incentive to stay current with
their multilateral debts because IFIs determine the creditworthiness of
borrowing countries. Until the IMF gives its stamp of approval that a
country is adhering to the economic policies it recommends, impoverished
countries generally cannot get credit or capital from other sources. Until
a country has signed onto an IMF program, it cannot apply for bilateral
debt relief from the Paris Club of creditor countries.
The significant growth of multilateral debt came to public attention
with the Latin American debt crisis of the early 1980s. Mexico, Argentina,
and Brazil all came to the brink of defaulting on loans that foreign banking
corporations had freely offered to developing country governments during
the 1970s. The IMF and the World Bank responded with massive loan packages
conditioned on implementation of structural adjustment programs (SAPs),
which are packages of neoliberal economic policy reforms ostensibly designed
to restore economic health to indebted countries. This promotion of SAPs
marked a changing course at both IFIs. The IMF shifted from short-term,
balance-of-payment loans, mainly to industrialized countries, to medium-term
loans for developing nations. The World Bank added policy-linked loans
to its infrastructure development projects. Private debts were converted
into multilateral debt as countries used the funds acquired from the IFIs
to pay off the private banks that refused to issue new loans.
Multilateral debt is a problem for the entire Global South, but its
particularly acute for the most impoverished countries. For low-income
countries (defined by the World Bank as those with per capita GNP below
$785), multilateral debt increased by some 544% between 1980 and 1997,
from $24.1 billion to $155.3 billion. Multilateral debt constitutes 32.75%
of the long-term debt burden of the most impoverished countries. For middle-income
countries, the corresponding percentage is 15%. World Bank figures for
1999 show that on average $128 million is transferred every day from the
62 most impoverished countries to wealthy countries, and that for every
dollar these countries receive in grant aid, they repay $13 on old debts.
The debilitating impact of debt is felt in two main ways: 1) through
the diversion of national resources to debt servicing, and 2) through
the negative social and economic consequences of the SAPs that indebted
countries are obligated to adopt. These SAPs are designed to transform
economies from a focus on production for the local market to one that
adopts a globalized model of production and export of products
that earn the most hard currency. SAP-linked IFI loans are meant to finance
the redesign of governmental, industrial, and commercial systems that
will enable countries to service debts and become more integrated into
the global economy. However, SAPs have almost invariably caused increased
poverty, unemployment, and environmental destruction, while also leading
to an increase in the overall size of a countrys multilateral debt.
The universal failure of the standard SAP recipe has meant that debt and
structural adjustment simply end up fueling each other.
The global Jubilee 2000 debt-cancellation movement, which acquired great
momentum in some 50 countries in the late 1990s, has continued under different
names since 2000. The latest version of the IMF/World Bank debt management
program, sometimes called the Cologne initiative (after the site of the
1999 summit of the G-7 countries), was a response, however inadequate,
to the Jubilee movement. As part of the Cologne terms, the U.S. and other
G-7 governments agreed to cancel 100% of the bilateral debts owed them
by the most impoverished countriesas long as they are obeying structural
adjustment programs. Despite the high hopes of many debt-cancellation
campaigners, the G-7 Summit in Genoa in 2001 yielded no new decisions
or initiatives on debt.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
- A voting structure determined by financial contributions means that
developing countries have little voice in the IFIs, while the U.S. government
holds nearly decisive power there.
- The revised IMF/World Bank debt plan of 1999 is designed less to provide
meaningful relief than to ensure that countries continue to implement
neoliberal economic policies.
- Maintaining leverage over other nations economic policies is
the central goal of debt policy of the U.S. Treasury and of the IFIs.
Voting power at the World Bank and the IMF is apportioned according to
the size of each countrys monetary contribution. The U.S. has by
far the largest share (18% of all votes) and can veto policy decisions,
since they require an 85% vote. The New York Times has gone so
far as to describe the IMF as a proxy of the U.S. government.
Any analysis of IFI policies is thus also a critique of U.S. policies.
The value of the leverage associated with multilateral debt and the extent
to which the G-7 controls the IFIs are evident at times of international
crisis. Just as Egyptian and Kenyan debts were cancelled during the Gulf
War, so in the wake of the September 11 attacks Pakistan was induced to
assist the fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban with promises of debt
cancellation and new loans from the IMF. Should the crisis persist, Indonesia,
with one of the largest debt burdens as well as the largest Muslim population,
will likely benefit as well.
The main response of the World Bank and the IMF to the impoverished countries
debt crisis has been the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative
of 1996. The ostensible aim of the program is to make the debt burden
of the poorest and most indebted countries sustainable. Once
a country is deemed eligible, it must demonstrate a commitment to sound
economic policiesthe IFIs usual euphemism for SAPsto
receive debt relief.
Under the original HIPC program, a country could not obtain benefits
until it completed a second 3-year SAP. In contrast, the 1999 Cologne
terms allow for some debt servicing to be suspended upon completion of
the first SAP, though the original servicing terms apparently can be reinstated
if the second SAP is not implemented to the IMFs satisfaction. For
countries in desperate need of debt relief so they can begin to direct
resources to social sectors, this type of provisional debt relief is a
cruel paradox. To obtain relief, debtor nations are first required to
demonstrate their willingness to make socioeconomicand perhaps politicalconditions
worse by adopting programs that starve people of health care, food subsidies,
and education.
HIPCs curious goal of debt sustainability basically
refers to an assessment of the debt servicing a country can afford without
going completely broke. The indicatora debt-to-export ratio of 150%was,
as the IFIs admit, chosen arbitrarily. The unsustainability of the IFIs
approach to debt reduction was amply illustrated by the case of Uganda,
the first country to go through the HIPC process. Less than a year after
being accorded its debt relief, Ugandas economic indicators had
slipped, due to a fall in the price of coffee, to the point where it qualified
for HIPC again. (It has, in fact, received a second set of benefits under
the Cologne initiative.) Seven additional countries are projected to lapse
into debt-servicing unsustainability after HIPC. Two countries, Zambia
and Niger, face the prospect of higher debt service costs after HIPC,
thanks to the programs complex and counterproductive formulas of
sustainability.
The first 22 countries to qualify for HIPC are still spending more on
debt servicing than on health care. For those that have begun to get relief
as of the end of 2000, the average overall reduction amounts to 27%not
a trivial decrease but hardly the kind of sweeping cancellation needed
to transform economies and to make them sustainable. These qualifying
debtor countries continue to spend $1.3 billion a year on debt service.
The new version of HIPC seeks to ensure that debt relief will effectively
reduce poverty through the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP), through
which governments and civil society ostensibly design their budget and
economic program together. But in the first countries to formulate PRSPs,
macroeconomic policy emerged from discussions between governments and
the IFIs without any meaningful civil society participation. Restricting
civil society input to narrow budgeting discussions and to efforts to
gauge poverty levels ensures that the PRSP will continue to be an instrument
of the standard policies of structural adjustment: high interest rates,
trade and investment liberalization, privatization, elimination of subsidies,
cuts in public sector jobs and social programs. Now, limited participation
of civil society risks giving the SAPs the appearance of enjoying popular
approval.
The meager results of the HIPC program suggest that its promises are
hollow ones, made solely to ensure that countries remain on the debt-and-structural-adjustment
treadmill. Otherwise, these countries might be tempted to default or opt
out of the global financial system altogether, despite the prospect of
losing access to markets and capital. The IFIs and the U.S. government
also have incentives to avert defaults: any gaps in the globalized economy
represent reduced control and loss of potential markets. A delinking through
debt default may even present an attractive alternative model for economic
development independent of U.S. influence.
Preservation of that influence and control is a far more important factor
in the U.S. approach to debt policy than recovery of the funds loaned.
Illustrating this point was U.S. policy in the wake of Hurricane Mitchs
devastation in Central America in 1998. Treasury Department officials
privately gave loss of leverage as their reason for refusing
to consider comprehensive debt cancellation for Nicaragua and Honduras.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recommendations
- Immediate and comprehensive debt cancellation is necessary for impoverished
countries to participate in the global economy as anything but a permanent
underclass.
- An international body, with strict requirements of fair representation,
with an orientation to sustainable and equitable development, and with
authority over the IMF and the World Bank, should determine the legitimacy
of debts and adjudicate their cancellation and reduction.
- Debts incurred for failed economic programs and nonperforming infrastructure
projects should be annulled.
For countries that have endured decades of severe indebtedness, poverty,
and subordination to the IFIs economic policies, comprehensive cancellation
of their outstanding debt, without externally imposed conditions, is necessary
if their people are ever to gain democratic control of their economic
destiny. As part of that cancellation, there should be a reckoning with
the question of the legitimacy of much of the current debt.
The U.S. government should ideally take the lead in such a program of
cancellation, first by canceling the bilateral debt of the most impoverished
countries without creditor-imposed conditions, and then strongly urging
similar cancellation of multilateral debt. It should also advocate for
and participate in a truth commission on the accumulation
and abuse of debt over the years, as a way of establishing the legitimacy
or illegitimacy of debts that national populations have been asked to
pay. That process could be linked to a new system in which an international
arbitration court arbitrates debt disputes and arrears independent of
the IFIs. Such a system would address both countries on the debt
treadmill and countries with currency crises. Instead of a drawn-out
drama like the one Argentina has endured since 1998, culminating in a
virtual default in late 2001 despite three IMF bailout packages,
a country in crisis could submit to the insolvency procedures of an independent
court and begin to re-establish its productivity with a minimum of damage
to the more vulnerable parts of the population.
University of Vienna economist Kunibert Raffer has suggested a process
for recognizing partial insolvency of national governments. Raffer cites
provisions in U.S. law permitting debts of local governments to be treated
like those of a company or an individual who has gone bankrupt, while
guaranteeing that essential services provided by the municipality are
not affected. His recommendation is echoed by a November 2001 report issued
by an emerging markets eminent persons group of widely respected
former finance ministers of South Korea, India, and Ghana, and the former
head of Chiles central bank. Although Raffer maintains that this
process could occur without the creation of a new international agencyhe
suggests a panel of arbitrators with equal creditor/debtor representationit
is hard to imagine that the World Bank and the IMF would have adequate
incentive to participate without the creation of some new regimen. This
would require that the United Nations or World Court establish a body
with authority over the IFIs and both creditor and debtor governments.
Once constituted, the new international court of arbitration would function
much like courts in the U.S. adjudicating cases of insolvency or bankruptcy.
It would be empowered to instruct creditors to accept a portion of their
claims and demand no more, and it would establish a process for cleansing
a countrys credit record, so that nation could re-enter the global
economy on fair terms. This new court would not have the power to insist
on particular economic programs as a condition for debt reduction.
The IFIs and some powerful governments would likely object to such a
debt arbitration system on the grounds that the IFIs status as preferred
creditors would be threatened if decisions on debt relief were removed
from their control. Such concerns should be met with the insistence that
the IFIs must take some responsibility for the effects of the policies
they have imposed around the world. In a similar vein, the World Bank
should be pressured to annul debts owed to it for projects its own analyses
show to be economic failures. (A 1992 World Bank report, Effective Implementation,
estimated 37.5% of World Bank projects should be so classified.) The proposed
court should perform an assessment of which IFI claims are legitimate
in light of their poor policy advice and failed projects.
The IFIs should also be forced to acceptthrough a change in their
bylaws, if necessarythe option of writing off debts. Private banks
do this routinely with loans they can never expect to be repaid, and many
took some losses in resolving the Latin American debt crisis in the early
1980s. The current HIPC program does not mandate that the IFIs write off
debt; instead they simply agree to accept full payment of the debts from
a fund created by donations from wealthier governments.
Activists in Jubilee South, which brings together debt cancellation campaigns
from across Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia-Pacific, and Africa, emphasize
the imperative of assessing who owes whom: after the exploitation
of slavery, colonialism, and the current economic system, their insistence
that Southern governments should repudiate their debts, and that Northern
governments and institutions should pay reparations and restitution cannot
be lightly dismissed as too radical or too unrealistic. At this point,
realizing economic and moral justice would require a deeper accounting
of past practices than most governments and institutions are prepared
to make.
Soren Ambrose <soren@50years.org>
is a policy analyst with 50 Years Is Enough: U.S. Network for Global Economic
Justice.
Sources for More Information
Organizations
50 Years Is Enough: U.S. Network for Global Economic Justice
3628 12th Street, NE
Washington, DC 20017
Voice: (202) 463-2265
Fax: (202) 636-4238
Email: 50years@50years.org
Website: http://www.50years.org/
Contact: Njoki Njehu; Soren Ambrose
European Network on Debt and Development (EURODAD)
BELGIUM
Voice: +32-2-543-9060
Fax: +32-2-544-0559
Email: eurodad@agoranet.be
Website: http://www.oneworld.org/eurodad/
Jubilee Plus
c/o New Economics Foundation
UK
Voice: (44) 207 089 2810
Fax (44) 207 407 6473
Email: info.jubilee@neweconomics.org
Website: http://www.jubilee2000uk.org/
Jubilee USA Network
222 E. Capitol St. NE
Washington, DC 20003
Voice: (202) 783-3566
Fax: (202) 546-4468
Email: coord@j2000usa.org
Website: http://www.j2000usa.org/
Contact: Marie Clarke
Publications
Susan George, A Fate Worse Than Debt: The World Financial Crisis and
the Poor (New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1990).
Karen Hansen-Kuhn and Doug Hellinger, Conditioning Debt Relief on
Adjustment: Creating the Conditions for More Indebtedness (Washington:
The Development GAP, April 1999).
Cheryl Payer, Lent and Lost: Foreign Credit and Third World Development
(Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Zed, 1991).
World Bank, Effective Implementation: Key to Development Impact, Report
of the World Banks Portfolio Management Task Force (Washington:
World Bank, 1992).
Websites
Jubilee South
http://www.jubileesouth.net/
International Monetary Fund
http://www.imf.org/
Kunibert Raffer (personal web page of this expert on insolvency
and governmental debt)
http://mailbox.univie.ac.at/~a4411maj/
U.S. Treasury Department
http://www.treas.gov/
World Bank
http://www.worldbank.org/
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