Author:
Chowdhury Anis,Sundaram Jomo Kwame
Abstract
ABSTRACTThe debt crises looming in developing countries are being exacerbated by changing debt composition. Declining net foreign exchange earnings have worsened their predicament. As concessional development finance declined, many governments turned to riskier forms of borrowing from international capital markets. Concerted interest rate hikes are supposed to stem inflation; however, given that prices have mainly risen due to supply chain disruptions caused by war, sanctions and pandemic, interest rate increases are likely to trigger more debt crises, much worse than before. Current discourses, for example about China's ‘debt trap’ diplomacy, distract from urgently needed international and national measures to avert the looming debt crises.
Reference73 articles.
1. State Capitalism and the New Global D/development Regime
2. Unpacking the Public Private Partnership Revival
3. Becker T. O.Jeanne P.Mauro J.D.OstryandR.Rancière(2007) ‘Country Insurance: The Role of Domestic Policies’.IMF Occasional PaperNo.254.Washington DC:International Monetary Fund.
4. Brautigam D.andY.Huang(2023) ‘Integrating China into Multilateral Debt Relief: Progress and Problems in the G20 DSSI’.Washington DC: China–Africa Research Center School of Advanced International Studies Johns Hopkins University.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献