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World Bank and IMF Fiddle While Africa Burns!
Africa Action (Washington, DC) www.africaaction.org
PRESS RELEASE
September 25, 2002
Washington, DC
Africa Action Warns of Exploding Debt Crisis; Issues New Recommendations
for Creditors
Ahead of this weekend's Annual Meetings of the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund (IMF), Africa Action denounced the failure of these institutions
to respond to Africa's growing debt crisis, and issued the recommendations
below for immediate action from creditors.
Africa Action's Executive Director, Salih Booker, said this morning:
African countries are paying more to the World Bank and IMF than they
can spend on the fight against HIV/AIDS. The current debt relief plan
is an outright failure, and allows rich country creditors to continue
to bleed African countries dry.
Booker cited this week's report on the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
(HIPC) Initiative, which once again revealed the failure of this initiative
to resolve the debt crisis in the world's poorest countries. In this report,
the World Bank and IMF concede that the HIPC program is working for less
than a quarter of those countries involved. UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan reached this conclusion two years ago, when he called HIPC inadequate,
and urged a new approach to debt cancellation.
Africa Action's critique of the HIPC Initiative is available at:
http://www.africaaction.org/action/hipc0206.htm
Referring to the recent announcement by Nigeria, that it can no longer
afford to pay its massive foreign debts, Booker said: Nigeria's plight
is the latest indicator of the unsustainable nature of the continent's
debts. All African countries need and deserve a fresh start, freed from
the shackles of debt bondage.
While current debt relief efforts in Congress center around amending
the HIPC initiative, Africa Action today called for a new approach that
moves beyond this failed framework.
Since the U.S. is the single largest shareholder at the World Bank and
IMF, to whom most of Africa's debt is owed, Africa Action calls on Congress
to take the following three immediate steps to address Africa's debt crisis:
(1) Authorize an inventory of the debts currently being repaid by African
countries, in order to determine the legitimacy of creditor claims.
Examples of illegitimate debts would include: debts contracted by repressive
regimes, where the money was used to strengthen the hold of these regimes;
or debts contracted by formally democratic but corrupt governments,
where the money was then stolen by senior officials for their own enrichment.
Lending of this nature was prevalent during the Cold War, when geo-strategic
interests often trumped development concerns. Indeed, debts incurred
by dictatorships for the purposes of enforcing their rule may be considered
"odious" in international law. Under this established legal
principle, such debts are not considered to be the responsibility of
the oppressed population or of subsequent governments. Odious debts
may, according to legal precedent, be cancelled on the basis of international
agreement. An inventory of African governments' outstanding debts should
also include an investigation of those cases where a country's debt
burden increased or was perpetuated as a result of conditions unilaterally
imposed by creditors.
(2) Authorize a study to ascertain what would be the cost to creditors
of the full cancellation of Africa's debts.
Recent studies indicate that the World Bank and IMF hold sufficient
wealth on their own balance sheets to absorb the full costs of multilateral
debt cancellation from their internal resources. Yet the World Bank
and IMF continue to maintain that outright debt cancellation is a financial
impossibility because it would critically undermine their future operations.
Congress should commission an independent study to investigate the veracity
of these claims and to accurately assess how 100% cancellation of Africa's
debts would affect the World Bank and IMF, and other creditors. This
study should include an analysis of the full costs of debt cancellation,
how these costs might be borne, and by whom, and what the impact would
be on creditors and debtors, both immediately and in the future.
(3) Call for a moratorium on debt repayments by African countries until
a resolution to the continent's debt crisis has been found.
Until a credible and equitable new approach has been determined to
resolving Africa's debt crisis, African countries should not be required
to continue diverting desperately needed resources to servicing unsustainable
external debts. A moratorium should be declared until such time as an
inventory of these debts has been compiled and the costs of 100% cancellation
have been determined, these two studies providing a foundation for moving
towards a just resolution to the continent's debt crisis. In light of
the question of illegitimacy hovering over much of Africa's debt, it
is appropriate that debt repayments be suspended while the nature of
the original debts and the validity of creditor claims are investigated.
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