International Debt Statistics 2022

Page 15

Overview

The world economy is still reeling from the oncein-a-generation crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic, that hit every part of the globe in 2020 and brought economic activity to a grinding halt. Governments around the world responded ­rapidly to stem both the health and economic contagion with fiscal and monetary stimulus packages. Hopes for a quick recovery were dashed when the second wave of the pandemic hit the world’s major economies in October 2020. World gross domestic product (GDP) fell by an estimated 4.3 percent in 2020—the sharpest contraction of output since the Great Depression. Developed economies were most severely impacted by the pandemic, and output is estimated to have shrunk by 5.6 percent in 2020. Low- and middleincome countries experienced a relatively less severe contraction, with output estimated to have contracted by 2.5 percent in 2020. There were, however, significant differences in the size of the shock among low- and middle-income countries, with those in Latin America and the Caribbean hardest hit. Countries in East Asia and the Pacific fared better, and their output is estimated to have expanded by 1 percent in 2020, thanks to China’s robust recovery. Against this unprecedented and uncertain backdrop, the development in debt stocks and financial flows to low- and middle-income countries in 2020 was a story of highs and lows. Rapid intervention and extraordinary support from multilateral institutions, led by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), raised net inflows from multilateral creditors to $117 billion, the highest level in a decade. The Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) was launched by Group of Twenty (G-20) countries in April 2020 to assist the poorest and most vulnerable low- and middle-income countries in managing the adverse impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. It offered 73 International Development Association (IDA)-eligible and least developed countries a temporary suspension of debt-service payments

owed to official bilateral creditors. The suspension period was originally set for payments falling due from May 1 to December 31, 2020, but was subsequently extended to end-December 2021. Bond issues from low- and middle-income countries were at a record high of $457 billion in 2020, but issuance from China accounted for nearly half of this amount. Market borrowers in Sub-Saharan Africa were priced out of the bond market for much of the year, and investor retreat from domestic markets in many low- and middle-income countries’ biggest borrowers led to large-scale capital flight and shrank debt inflows. Net debt inflows rose 9 percent to $435 billion, but the 26 percent increase in inflows to China masked a marginal, 1 percent increase in debt inflows to other lowand middle-income countries. Many developing countries entered 2020 in a vulnerable position, with public external debt already at elevated levels. Fiscal support to mitigate the impacts of COVID-19 pushed debt levels in some countries to record highs. The external debt stock of low- and middle-income countries rose, on average 5.3 percent in 2020, about the same pace as the two prior years. Prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, rising public debt levels and heightened debt vulnerabilities were already a cause for concern in many of the world’s poorest IDA borrowers, and these have been further exacerbated. In 2020, the external debt stock of IDA DSSI-eligible countries rose, on average, 12 percent in 2020, and for nine of these countries it rose 20 percent or more. The rise in external indebtedness was not matched by gross national income (GNI) and exports growth. Low- and middle-income countries external debtto-GNI ratio rose to 29 percent in 2020 from 27 percent in 2019, and the debt-to-export ratio increased to 123 percent from 106 percent in 2019. The worsening of debt indicators was widespread across all geographic regions. Equity inflows to low- and middle-income countries fell 15 percent in 2020 to $473 billion.

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Income Groups

1min
page 200

Sources of the Macroeconomic Indicators

2min
pages 196-198

Data Documentation

17min
pages 191-195

External Debt and Its Components

8min
pages 188-190

Indicators

2min
pages 181-182

Methodology

6min
pages 186-187

User Guide to Tables

3min
pages 177-178

Vietnam

3min
page 171

Venezuela, RB

3min
page 170

Vanuatu

2min
page 169

Uzbekistan

3min
page 168

Ukraine

3min
page 167

Turkmenistan

2min
page 165

Turkey

3min
page 164

Tunisia

3min
page 163

Tonga

2min
page 162

Timor-Leste

2min
page 160

Thailand

3min
page 159

Tanzania

3min
page 158

Sri Lanka

3min
page 152

St. Vincent and the Grenadines

2min
page 154

South Africa

3min
page 151

St. Lucia

2min
page 153

Solomon Islands

3min
page 149

Sierra Leone

2min
page 148

Serbia

3min
page 147

Romania

3min
page 141

Philippines

3min
page 140

Samoa

2min
page 144

Russian Federation

3min
page 142

São Tomé and Príncipe

2min
page 145

Peru

3min
page 139

Paraguay

2min
page 138

Papua New Guinea

3min
page 137

Panama

3min
page 136

Morocco

3min
page 127

Pakistan

3min
page 135

Nigeria

3min
page 133

Mexico

3min
page 123

Maldives

3min
page 119

Liberia

3min
page 116

Lesotho

2min
page 115

Kenya

3min
page 110

Jordan

3min
page 108

Indonesia

3min
page 105

India

3min
page 104

Kazakhstan

3min
page 109

Lebanon

3min
page 114

Haiti

3min
page 102

Guinea-Bissau

2min
page 100

Ethiopia

2min
page 91

Grenada

2min
page 97

Georgia

3min
page 95

Gambia, The

2min
page 94

Ghana

3min
page 96

Eswatini

2min
page 90

Guatemala

3min
page 98

Eritrea

2min
page 89

Dominican Republic

3min
page 85

El Salvador

3min
page 88

Egypt, Arab Republic of

3min
page 87

Ecuador

3min
page 86

Côte d’Ivoire

3min
page 82

Djibouti

2min
page 83

Costa Rica

3min
page 81

Comoros

2min
page 78

Colombia

3min
page 77

Cabo Verde

2min
page 71

China

3min
page 76

Central African Republic

2min
page 74

Bulgaria

3min
page 68

Burundi

2min
page 70

Brazil

3min
page 67

Bosnia and Herzegovina

3min
page 65

Bhutan

3min
page 63

Argentina

3min
page 56

Azerbaijan

3min
page 58

Key Messages of the 2020 Data Are as Follows

6min
pages 16-17

Belarus

3min
page 60

Bangladesh

3min
page 59

Armenia

3min
page 57

Overview

3min
page 15
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International Debt Statistics 2022 by World Bank Publications - Issuu