Ethiopia has plunged into economic uncertainty, defaulting on a $33 million interest payment due on December 11. This setback follows the Tigray civil war, impacting investor sentiment and economic growth.
The Global Debt Crisis Unfolds
Ethiopia joins the ranks of nations like Sri Lanka and Lebanon, standing at the brink of a debt crisis. Over 70 low-income countries grapple with a colossal debt burden of $326 billion. China, the largest creditor, poses a significant challenge for debt servicing. A December 2023 World Bank report signals a 5% increase in debt servicing payments for developing countries, with Arab nations like Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon facing high-risk debt scenarios.
Challenges in Debt Restructuring
Ethiopia's debt crisis centers around a missed $33 million interest payment on a $1 billion bond from 2014. Despite ongoing restructuring talks, resolution proves elusive due to differences between China and Western countries and private lenders' reluctance. Ethiopia's debt to GDP ratio stands at 46.37, lower than Kenya's 67.94, yet liquidity issues persist.
reply
Perfect. Thanks
reply
33, is the magic number 👀
reply
👀
reply
In Ethiopia right now - things have become a little more expensive this year but otherwise the situation is quite stable especially in the capital city - no inflation or protests yet.
reply
Hope for You this won't change. If only for the better! Greets
reply
70 low-income countries for $326 billion debt, how long does it take for the US to accumulate the same amount, probably not even a quarter...really don't know how the debt crisis will unfold but looking at the numbers it won't be pretty
reply
There will be a great wealth transfer via inflation, taxation and expropriation. Don't worry, parasites always survive.
reply
The Creature from Jekyll Island docit
reply
It seems like everyone is in debt to everyone else to an insane degree... is there any country that isn't in debt and shouldn't some of this debt cancel each other out?
reply
Russia has very low public debt. That's history laughing at us.
reply