UN: Poor States Face 17% Dept Servicing Rise
New York, Nov 9 2009 12:10PM
Poor countries, already hit hard by the global financial and economic crisis in their efforts to fund social and health programmes, are facing a double blow this year with debt servicing increasing by over 17 per cent as a proportion of government revenue, a top United Nations trade official warned today.
Moreover, the crisis has weakened the banking
sectors of several low-income countries, UN Conference on
Trade and Development (UNCTAD">http://www.unctad.org/Templates/StartPage.asp?intItemID=2068">UNCTAD)
Secretary-General Supachai Panitchpakdi told a debt
management conference in Geneva.
“If the global
crisis were to extend beyond 2010, the risk of bank failures
would increase in some developing countries, adding further
pressure on their already strained budgetary positions,”
he said.
He stressed that developing countries faced a
serious dilemma as they seek to emerge from poverty and
achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) the world
set itself in 2000 to slash a host of social ills, ranging
from extreme poverty and hunger to maternal and infant
mortality to lack of access to education and health care,
all by 2015.
Borrowing heavily to achieve these
targets, as well as to build roads, railways, ports and
other infrastructure needed to allow long-term economic
progress, saddles them with debt that leads to slow growth.
But not making such investments also leads to slow growth
and will lead to may countries not meeting the MDGs, he
said.
UNCTAD has already begun a major project –
called Promoting Sovereign Lending and Borrowing – which
aims at helping creditor and debtor countries to establish
standards that might avoid periodic repayment difficulties
and more easily resolve disputes.
The three-day
meeting, the seventh of UNCTAD’s debts management
conferences, is being attended by over 300 participants from
some 100 countries, including government finance, debt, and
treasury officials, banking representatives and academics
specializing in development finance, along with officials
from multilateral organizations.
ENDS