Publications /
Policy Brief

Back
Debt Sustainability and Development Financing in Sub- Saharan Africa: Recent Dynamics
Authors
Lotfi El Jai
September 18, 2019

Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) currently face a yearly infrastructure financing gap ranging between $68-$108 billion along with other socio-economic challenges (AfDB, 2019). Debt financing remains a major source of growth as countries in the region work to achieve their developmental needs and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The levels of official development aid (ODA) and foreign direct investments (FDIs) remain volatile to fully meet the region financial needs. However, the sustainability of SSA external debt raises serious concerns if one looks at the rapid debt accumulation in recent years. This brief will highlight the recent changes in the nature and quality of debt in SSA along with details of the risks related to the shift in the creditors base. Finally, this brief aims to demonstrate the impact of these risks on debt sustainability and the future of development financing in SSA.

In the early part of the 21st century, debt sustainability challenged Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) as it sought to reach the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Following two episodes of debt relief (HIPC and MDRI2), the average debt-to-GDP ratio has decreased from over 100% in 2000 to less than 40% in 2010 (figure 1), representing a debt stock reduction of almost $100 billion (IMF, 2017). This was a breath of fresh air that would have allowed SSA countries to sustain their current and future debt levels and promote development expenditures in the region.

However, with the stagnation in the level of official development aid following the Global Financial Crisis of 2007, and the difficulties of the region’s countries in mobilizing domestic resources to finance their infrastructure and socio-economic development needs

RELATED CONTENT

  • April 14, 2021
    Data continuously shows that women’s access to management positions in organizations is limited compared to men. This is also true in other sectors and at all levels in society. Although ...
  • April 14, 2021
    When the global financial crisis hit the international economy in 2008, central banks in major advanced economies widened their range of monetary policy instruments, increasingly resorting to unconventional tools. Initially to avoid a deepening of the financial destabilization and bankr...
  • April 13, 2021
    منصات التواصل الاجتماعي: بين تعبئة الحركات الاجتماعية وتحديات صيانة البيانات الشخصية إن نمو وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي باعتبارها مصدرا فعالا للبيانات من أجل فهم بيئة المعلومات قد جعل منها أكثر أهمية من أي وقت مضى. يقتـرن تحليـل وسـائل التواصـل الاجتماعـي بتحليل مجموعــة كبيــرة مــن الجماه...
  • April 13, 2021
    Technologies and Big Data in Shaping African Public Services: Towards Efficient Digital Solutions for Africa Social Good Can technology and digitalization improve and enhance the value we get from public services? Data can change the experience that individuals get from a public service...
  • Authors
    Moubarack Lo
    Amaye Sy
    April 12, 2021
    La pandémie de la Covid-19, qui a touché la quasi-totalité des pays et territoires du globe terrestre, continue à générer des millions d’infections et de décès. Pour l’éradiquer, les pays mobilisent d’énormes efforts pour vacciner leurs populations et réussir ainsi à atteindre l’immunité collective. L’objet de ce Papier est d’évaluer l’efficacité de la vaccination anti Covid-19, autrement dit sa capacité à stopper réellement la progression des infections et des décès. Pour répondre ...
  • Authors
    April 12, 2021
    The COVID-19 Virus and the Liberation of Women It seems not much has changed in almost 400 years since Molière wrote these words in his comedy The school for wives. Male dominance, God-like characters, known as men, united in inexcusable discrimination, sexism, gender inequality, infallible men forever trying to rule the world. “A wife who writes, knows more than can be good for her”, Molière’s main character sighs in the play, insisting that female brightness as a rule “is a bad o ...
  • April 12, 2021
    Water resources have become increasingly scarce in several regions of the world, particularly in arid and semi-arid zones. Countries located in these regions are constrained by water scarcity due to their hydro-climatic characteristics and intra- and interannual rainfall fluctuations. I...
  • April 09, 2021
    C’est dans un contexte marqué à la fois par la crise sanitaire liée à la pandémie de COVID-19 et par l’émergence de nouvelles menaces à la paix et à la sécurité du continent africain que ...
  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    April 9, 2021
    As a Project Assistant responsible for Speech Writing in the Office of Dr. Ibrahim Mayaki, CEO of the African Union Development Agency-NEPAD, Seleman Kitenge, born in 1989 in Tanzania, is now based in Johannesburg. He was first a volunteer for the African Union (AU) in the same role for one year, before being hired in August 2020 by the AU Development Agency. “I’m enjoying it, he says, some of my mentors are really good”. Among them, Togolani Mavura,  Private Secretary and Speech W ...