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G8 Debt Relief Could Lead to New Borrowing
Aug 2, 2005
by Emad Mekay
WASHINGTON, Aug 2 (IPS) - Anti-debt campaigners leaked a document
Tuesday showing that the World Bank is considering extending additional loans to
countries eligible for a widely-publicised debt cancellation plan by the world's richest
nations, a scheme that they say would defeat the purpose of the write-off.
The World Bank says it has made no final
recommendations, but that poor nations with limited resources will likely have a
continuing need to borrow even after graduating from the debt relief programme.
The leaked document details options being put
together by World Bank officials for implementation of the debt forgiveness plan by the
Group of Eight (G8) most industrialised nations, which will be discussed at a meeting of
World Bank executive directors in Washington in a few days.
A final proposal will be issued by the World
Bank when it meets in September.
The Jubilee Debt Campaign and the World
Development Movement (WDM), two non-governmental organisations that disseminated
the document to journalists, said in a joint statement that the Bank's analysis shows that it
is exploring the conditions under which debt repayments would be re-imposed on those
countries.
The document, prepared by Geoff Lamb, the
Bank's vice president for concessional finance, says that "most countries receiving
100 percent debt cancellation would be classified as 'green light' and therefore become
eligible for new borrowing."
The document refers to a communiqué
by the G8 announcing the debt relief plan and stating that countries receiving debt relief
should be "eased into new borrowing". Further, it says that "given lower
risk of debt distress (after debt relief), countries could potentially borrow more."
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Campaigners warn that this would make the
plan fundamentally different from what was initially proposed.
"(The original plan) did seem to concede
the key principle that once countries have completed the onerous task of getting debt
relief they would have all their debts cancelled immediately with no chance that
repayments could recommence under any circumstances," said Steven Rand, co-
chair of the Jubilee Debt Campaign. "This now appears from these documents to be
in question."
Activists do not want to see eligible countries
falling back into debt, arguing that they should receive grants and get "a clean
start."
"What the document seems to contain is
the World Bank asking the executive directors how quickly they can get the countries that
receive debt relief back into patterns of borrowing and back into debt, which is an
extremely worrying path for the Bank to be taking countries down," Dave Timms,
spokesperson for the WDM, told IPS. "They talk about how quickly to get them back
into a position of the heavily indebted."
The original plan, announced by British Finance
Minister Gordon Brown with much fanfare in July, is that the G8 nations will offer 100
percent cancellation of debts owed by at least 18 of the most heavily indebted nations to
the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the African Development Bank.
But a World Bank spokesperson said that the
paper was "an informal and preliminary presentation" of the impact of the debt
plan and is not meant to draw a road map for poor countries after the debt relief.
He added that the World Bank remained
concerned about the ability of poor nations to raise significant amounts of funds outside
the Bank's soft loans arm, the International Development Association (IDA), given their
limited resources.
"The object here is not to clear the debts
of these countries so the Bank can just resume lending to them," said Damian Sean
Milverton. "The point of this is to ensure that developing countries, no matter what
position they are in, have access to resources going forward because we know they need
as much assistance as possible to improve their economies, create their jobs and make
better lives for their people."
"Once a country's gone through the debt
relief programme, it very well may not get a loan from the Bank again, but it very well may
go to other sources and take on debt," he said. "No one is saying these
countries shouldn't borrow again. And in fact if the NGOs are saying that, they need to
have another think about it."
But debt campaigners say the document shows
other loopholes in the deal touted by Brown to protesters who gathered in Scotland last
month, where leaders of the G8 were meeting.
Typically, the conditions tied to loans from the
Bank and the IMF include privatisation of public assets, the lifting of trade barriers and
budget cuts that take funding away from social and environmental programmes.
Two weeks ago, debt campaigners obtained a
document detailing how some European representatives at the IMF were proposing major
changes to the G8 debt deal. It showed that the proposals could hold up or even stop the
promised debt cancellation and maintain the IMF's iron grip on poor nations' economies
even after they qualify for debt cancellation.
"The G8 are serial promise breakers and
for the past 20 years they have used the debts of the poorest countries as a way to impose
privatisation, free trade and deregulation on developing countries," said WDM's Head
of Policy Peter Hardstaff.
"Unless these debts are irreversibly lifted
from developing countries, we have no faith that rich countries will not use international
institutions to impose damaging free market conditions in the future," he said.
(END/2005)
InterPress Service
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