Economy Cash-strapped nations face IMF bailout delays as talks drag on By Reuters March 3, 2023, 5:39 AM REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan In December 2022, the IMF approved a 46-month loan of $3 billion to support Egypt’s macroeconomic stability Gap between preliminary IMF deal and board sign off is quite longMedian gap period over the past decade was 55 daysChina has emerged as top bilateral lender in recent yearsMore complicated creditor structures and Covid-19 added to delays Countries in debt distress such as Zambia and Sri Lanka turning to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for financial help are facing unprecedented delays to secure bailouts as China and Western economies clash over how to provide debt relief. IMF funding is often the sole financial lifeline available to countries in a debt crunch, and key to unlocking other financing sources, with delays putting pressure on government finances, companies and populations. For Zambia, it took 271 days between reaching a $1.3 billion staff-level agreement with the IMF – a preliminary financing deal usually agreed during a country visit – and the fund’s executive board signing off, a prerequisite for actual disbursements. The first African country to default in the Covid-19 pandemic era in 2020, Zambia’s ongoing debt relief negotiations involving China have been closely watched by other countries as a test case for the major emerging market lender. Though staff agreements can be reached without financing assurances, the IMF board needs them to approve the programme. These are guarantees that sovereign lenders – and to some extent commercial creditors – will negotiate a restructuring in line with the IMF’s debt sustainability analysis, providing relief and financing when needed. Sri Lanka has been waiting for 182 days to finalise a bailout after a $2.9 billion September staff level deal while Ghana, having defaulted on its overseas debt in December following a preliminary IMF deal, has yet to get board approval 80 days later. This compares to a median of 55 days it took low- and middle-income countries over the last decade to go from preliminary deal to board sign-off, according to public data from over 80 cases compiled by Reuters. These delays have been caused by a number of reasons, but debt experts mainly point to the fact that China is still reluctant to offer debt relief in comparable terms with other external creditors. “They are part of the reason why these negotiations are so painfully slow,” said Kevin Gallagher, director of the Boston University Global Development Policy Center. “It’s not just the Paris Club and a few New York banks anymore.” China’s ministry of foreign affairs didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Chinese premier Li Keqiang said on Wednesday the country is willing to “constructively” participate in solving debt problems of relevant countries under a multilateral framework. But Beijing has always emphasised all creditors should follow the principle of “joint action, fair burden” in debt settlements. An IMF spokesperson said it was a “very small number of countries” that suffered “significant delays”, acknowledging this was in particular where there was a need to restructure debt owed to official bilateral lenders. However, the time from staff level agreement to lending approval had remained “broadly consistent for a vast majority of countries”, the spokesperson added. Besides members of the Paris Club of creditor nations such as the United States, France and Japan, cash-strapped nations now have to rework loans with lenders such as India, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Kuwait – but first and foremost China. Beijing is the largest bilateral creditor to developing nations, extending $138 billion in new loans between 2010 and 2021, according to World Bank data. For countries such as Sri Lanka facing shortages of food, fuel and medicines as well as painful reforms to alleviate a debt crisis after years of economic mismanagement, the delays can be devastating. The war in Ukraine added pressure as global commodity prices soared. “Sri Lanka going beyond March without an IMF programme will be challenging for us,” said the country’s State Minister of Finance Sehan Semasinghe. “We need the programme to justify the reforms that need to be made for the economic stabilisation process.” More complex debt world After the Covid-19 pandemic raised pressure on highly-indebted economies, the Group of 20 economies launched in 2020 the Common Framework, a platform designed to help low-income nations restructure sovereign debt. For the first time, China joined a multilateral effort aimed at reworking sovereign debt. Chad, Ethiopia and Zambia signed up in early 2021. Chad secured a deal in November with its creditors, including Swiss commodities trader Glencore, an outcome without debt reduction that some analysts said undermined the Common Framework efforts. Ethiopia’s progress was delayed by civil war, and Ghana joined the platform earlier this year. In a recent letter sent to Sri Lanka, a non-Common Framework country due to its middle-income status, China’s Export-Import Bank offered a two-year debt moratorium, raising concerns over how much of a hit Beijing was prepared to take. “The question remains whether China is willing to accept a real extension of maturities that locks in a concessional interest rate for a long period of time,” said Brad Setser, senior fellow for international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), in Washington. Gregory Smith, emerging markets fund manager at London-based M&G Investments, said China had a legacy of providing debt relief “but it typically involves maturity extensions or temporary freeze in interest payments”, while face-value reductions in the principal are rare. Unlike the Paris Club, Chinese lenders tackle restructuring or cancellation on a loan-by-loan basis rather than for the entire portfolio, according to a working paper of the China Africa Research Initiative (Care), which found 1,000 Chinese loans commitments in 49 African countries since 2000. Adding another layer of complexity to these debt talks, the Common Framework doesn’t lay out precise rules on how a debt restructuring with bilateral creditors should work. The IMF recognised that “greater clarity on the different steps and timelines” is vital, as well as clear mechanisms to enforce the comparability of treatment. For Setser, time is slipping away for Zambia. “If there isn’t an agreement at least on the basic outlines of the financial terms of restructuring in Zambia by this quarter, it’ll be time to declare the Common Framework a failure,” he said.