How a rising greenback may damage African economies – DW – 11/15/2024 | EUROtoday

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Donald Trump has vowed to lift US import tariffs and introduce a raft of recent tax cuts when he takes the White House for a second time period on January 20. The plans, together with falling US rates of interest, are anticipated to gasoline an additional rise within the US greenback, which surged to a one-year excessive when Trump was reelected.

The greenback’s rise could have far-reaching penalties for the remainder of the world, stoking producer import prices and fueling inflation. It can even make debt servicing amongst many low-income international locations a lot tougher, particularly dollar-denominated loans payable from weaker native currencies.

One continent the place the results of a stronger greenback are anticipated to be felt most harshly is Africa, the place 9 international locations are already in debt misery and 10 others are at “high risk” of insolvency, based on the World Bank.

“Over 50% of low and middle-income countries’ sovereign debt is denominated in foreign currencies, mostly the dollar,” Karim Karaki, head of the financial restoration and transformation group on the European Center for Development Policy Management (ECDPM) assume tank, instructed DW.

“With a rising dollar, the cost of servicing the debt increases. That means more government spending on debt servicing and less in productive investments serving their industrialization and development objectives,” he added.

A money changer counts Nigerian naira currency at a bureau de change, in Lagos, Nigeria, on October 20, 2015
Nigeria spent $3.5 billion on overseas debt servicing within the first 9 months of 2024Image: Sunday Alamba/AP Photo/image alliance

Indebted nations’ woes may worsen

David Omojomolo, an Africa-focused rising market economist on the London-based Capital Economics, warned in a analysis report this week that Trump’s risk of further tariffs on items imported into the United States was a “clear worry,” because the rising greenback would “make it even harder for some [African] countries to regain access to global capital markets.”

Several African governments, together with Kenya, Zambia, Ghana and Ethiopia, are presently blocked from elevating capital on the world’s monetary markets resulting from their heavy indebtedness.

“We are most worried about Angola and Kenya,” Omojomlolo wrote, noting how the Angolan authorities had just lately warned it was struggling to service its debt whereas funding day-to-day spending, whereas Kenya’s authorities was compelled by mass protests in June to U-turn on tax hikes to chop the nationwide debt. Nairobi has since pledged to borrow extra to offset a number of the ache of austerity.

“If borrowing from international capital markets becomes more difficult, many in the region will remain reliant on financing from the likes of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank to avert sovereign default,” Omojomlolo warned.

Nine African international locations in debt misery

Ethiopia, the Republic of Congo, Mozambique, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, Zimbabwe, and Chad had been classed by the World Bank final yr as being in debt misery, in addition to Zambia, which defaulted on round $12 billion (€11.4 billion) of debt in 2020 — on the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Zambia is present process debt restructuring with worldwide and personal collectors, together with China and France.

The US foreign money could also be seen as a secure haven from the various geopolitical crises going through the world, however the greenback’s current rise has already stymied efforts by international locations like Zambia to sort out poverty, overcome well being crises and spend money on infrastructure, as state budgets have been diverted to satisfy greater debt obligations.

“When the dollar appreciated over the last two, three years, you had countries spending more on servicing their debt than on health or education,” Karaki stated. “Beyond the impact on social sectors, that undermines countries’ ability to invest and support its own private sector and economic transformation, which also has a huge impact on job creation.”

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva speaks during the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on April 28, 2024
The IMF warned just lately that poorer international locations spend twice as a lot on exterior debt repayments than a decade in the pastImage: Hamad I Mohammed/REUTERS

Already excessive inflation may worsen

Africa, as a main producer of essential commodities like oil, gold and copper — that are priced in {dollars} — might be hit exhausting because the US foreign money continues to strengthen. Although they might initially profit from rising costs, these commodities would develop into costlier in different currencies, which might then scale back world demand and push costs decrease.

Falling exports may damage oil producing Nigeria, South Africa’s gold and platinum commerce and Zambia’s predominant copper mines. These international locations rely closely on commodity exports for foreign-exchange earnings that enhance nationwide budgets.

A brand new burst of inflation, attributable to the rising greenback, would additionally come on high of already excessive inflation in lots of African international locations that usually surpasses 20% — typically a lot greater.

South Sudan reported a 107% inflation fee in July, whereas Zimbabwe, which skilled two bouts of hyperinflation because the flip of the century, remains to be battling stubbornly excessive value rises of over 50% a yr. Nigeria — Africa’s largest financial system — noticed inflation hit an annual common of 32.7% in September, simply because the nation’s debt burden surpassed $100 billion.

The logo of the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
The Washington-based IMF is a lender of final resort to debt-strained nationsImage: Maksym Yemelyanov/Zoonar/image alliance

IMF warns over inflation, indebtedness

In its most up-to-date outlook for sub-Saharan Africathe IMF warned earlier this month that “in much of the region, the fight to stabilize prices is not over, public finances are not yet on a solid footing, and foreign exchange reserve buffers are often insufficient.”

Abebe Aemro Selassie, director of the IMF’s African division, stated whereas public debt has stabilized in a lot of Africa, it stays at a “high level” and “rising debt service burdens [are] crowding out resources for development spending.”

Debt restructuring is sluggish and cumbersome

There are actually calls to reform the way in which that debt restructuring is undertaken, with some advocating for a everlasting world mechanism to handle sovereign debt points and the inclusion of personal collectors in negotiations.

At current, debt crises are dealt with on a country-by-country foundation, which is commonly sluggish and overly advanced. Zambia and Ethiopia just lately complained after being put via a protracted interval of debt misery. In Zambia’s case, United Nations consultants warned that the delays to refinancing had damage the nation’s capacity to satisfy its human rights obligations.

Is Africa higher off with out the IMF?

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Debt restructuring reform wants to beat the various conflicting pursuits amongst collectors. Some like China and the US favor bilateral agreements to allow them to tailor the restructuring phrases to their strategic pursuits.

“We urgently need to have much better tools to deal with debt restructuring,” ECDPM’s Karaki instructed DW. “A lot of countries are suffering and there is a cost of doing nothing; not only for those developing economies, but also for for Europe, the US and the rest of the world.”

Edited by: Uwe Hessler

https://www.dw.com/en/how-a-rising-dollar-could-hurt-african-economies/a-70781588?maca=en-rss-en-bus-2091-rdf