Jump to navigation

Zambia

Debt deal teeters on the brink of collapse

G20 creditor committee rejects revised Zambia agreement, potentially deterring other countries from applying and putting the relief programme at risk

The threats to Zambia's painstakingly agreed debt restructuring deal could be the last nail in the coffin on the Group of 20's Common Framework debt relief programme.

Last week's decision by the Official Creditors Committee to reject a revised deal on the grounds that it breached the 'comparability of treatment principle' – where no creditor should receive more favourable treatment than the others – and did not provide enough debt relief has sent the government in Lusaka and bondholders back to the drawing board.

'The OCC is inexplicably blocking the path to restoring Zambia's debt sustainability by dictating terms it has no right to define,' said bondholders in a statement, adding that 'the OCC's intransigence risks inflicting severe damage to Zambia's economy and poses an existential threat to the entire viability of the Common Framework, impacting the emerging markets asset class.'

The bondholders were set to take a bigger upfront haircut than China – Zambia's largest bilateral creditor – which has agreed to restructure $4.1 billion.

Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane has complained that the delays have hit economic growth, weighed on local financial markets and increased the cost of living.

Praising President Hakainde Hichilema's government for its role in brokering the agreement, the International Monetary Fund had previously said it would use the deal as a template for other nations such as Ethiopia and Ghana that are also seeking debt restructuring under the G20's Common Framework.

However, no country has brokered a debt relief deal based on the G20 programme since its creation in 2020, and Zambia's travails are likely to further discourage other debt-distressed African countries from following Lusaka's path.



Related Articles

Lungu's victory under fire

The opposition legal challenge to the President's narrow win seems unlikely to succeed but there are major holes in his defence

Most pundits think that the opposition petition submitted to the Constitutional Court challenging President Edgar Lungu's much criticised election victory has only a slim chance of success. If...


Levy and King Cobra

Presidential elections set for 28 September 2006 will pit incumbent President Levy Mwanawasa of the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD) against veteran bruiser Michael Sata on the Patriotic...


Down the mine, down the drain

Political troubles were overshadowed on 25 January, when Anglo American announced that it was pulling out of the Copperbelt less than two years after reinvesting there. Copper had...


Investment relations

Despite the travails in Zambia's relations with China and fears that changes in mining regulation and taxation would scare off Asian companies, the flow of investment continues. Officials...


Post-KK traumas

The old leader has gone and the new ones have not yet arrived

So strong was the personality cult around the Independence leader and Father of the Nation, former President Kenneth Kaunda, that his United National Independence Party has been thrown...