G20’s Debt Service Suspension Initiative
- December 12, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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G20’s Debt Service Suspension Initiative
Subject: Economy
Context:
The International Monetary Fund Chief has called on China to speed up restructuring of debt in Sri Lanka and Zambia following a meeting with the leaders of the country.
Details:
- China will implement the G20’s Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) in all respects.
- China has given infrastructural loans and cover up loans.
Concept:
Cover up loans or bridge finance
- These are monetary instability linked borrowings that are not linked to infrastructure or economic reforms
- It was given to Sri Lanka to cover the forex shortages under ‘flexible inflation targeting/output gap targeting’ compound borrowings from sovereign bond investors.
- The World Bank and Asian Development Bank does not give such ‘bridging finance’ or budget support loans without reforms to expand economic activities.
G20’s Debt Service Suspension Initiative
- G20 set up the Debt Service Suspension Initiative in 2020 and later, the Common Framework to address unsustainable debts faced by countries, especially in the aftermath of the pandemic.
- Other debt reduction initiatives –the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative, Paris Club, London Club, Brady Plan, and the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC).
- The Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) means that bilateral official creditors suspend debt service payments from the poorest countries on request.
- The DSSI is part of a broader package to support low-income countries, including the provision of further concessional financing, debt relief under the CCRT support for capacity development and a new general SDR allocation.
- DSSI eligible countries that need debt relief beyond the DSSI, are encouraged to seek such relief under the G20 Common Framework.
- In order to apply for the DSSI, a country either needs to be in an IMF financing arrangement, or it needs to have requested financing (including emergency financing) from the IMF.
Conditionality | Creditor Participation | Private Sector | |
DSSI | Use fiscal space for social, health and economic support, as monitored by IFIs. Disclose all public sector financial commitments, with technical assistance from IFIs. | Only provides maturity extension on a uniform basis for all DSSI-eligible countries. | Voluntary private sector participation. |
Common Framework | The need for debt treatment will be based on an IMF-WBG Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA) and the participating official creditors’ collective assessment. The debtor countries will have to provide all public sector financial commitments. | It provides debt relief through maturity extension and interest rate reduction. Offers guiding agreements on debt treatment on a case-by-case basis. Includes comparability of treatment with other creditors. | It includes non-Paris Club members. Includes comparability of treatment with other creditors. |