International Somalia has 99% of $2bn debt cancelled in major boost to fragile recovery

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Paris Club of creditor nations agree cancellation as Mogadishu moves towards financial normalisation amid ongoing conflict

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The Paris Club, a collection of some of the world’s wealthiest creditor nations, has announced the cancellation of 99% of Somalia’s debt, in a major boost as the country continues its fragile economic recovery from an ongoing three-decade conflict.

In a statement released by the Paris Club, which is run by senior officials from the French Treasury, Somalia’s creditors, including the US, UK, Russia, Norway, and Japan, announced the cancellation of $2bn owed to club members as of January 2023.


In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Somalia’s finance minister, Bihi Eged, said: “Achieving full debt relief will transform Somalia’s future and allow our government to create fiscal space for basic public services.” Somalia’s information minister, Daud Aweis, said on X that the agreement marked a “big milestone in the country’s journey to financial recovery”.

Kristalina Georgieva, the managing director of the IMF, also welcomed the breakthrough, calling it a “major stride towards economic development and poverty reduction” for Somalia.

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The British ambassador to Somalia, Mike Nithavrianakis, said the UK, one of Somalia’s lenders, was ready “to honour our commitment to full debt relief”.

The Paris Club said part of the debt would be waived on a “voluntary and bilateral basis” between individual countries that Somalia had borrowed from and the rest under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC), an IMF and World Bank scheme to support poorer countries with unsustainable debt levels.

Somalia qualified for debt cancellation under the HIPC last December, making it eligible for up to $4.5bn of debt relief and beginning the normalisation of its relations with international financial markets after three decades of exclusion.

The decision by the Paris Club represents the first major step toward financial normalisation for Mogadishu following the HIPC programme.

Welcoming the December decision in a column for the Guardian, the country’s president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, said: “Somalia’s debt relief journey was no simple task; it took nearly a decade, three different administrations, two presidents and four finance ministers to attain debt relief from the boards of the World Bank and IMF on 13 December.”

“Debt relief,” he said, “is just the beginning of real change for Somalia.”

The HIPC initiative helps countries that are laden with debt to restructure their budgets, improve transparency and target poverty reduction, in preparation for debt relief.

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The majority of Somalia’s debt was accumulated during the years of Siad Barre’s military dictatorship, which collapsed in 1991, with interest accruing on the loans since then.

Uweis Abdullahi Ali, an economist at the Heritage Institute, a Mogadishu-based thinktank, said the debt relief “is a big achievement for Somalia and allows [it] to begin re-engaging with credibility with international financial markets”.

Ali added that although Mogadishu was now able to access a wider array of concessional loans, grants and more financial instruments to help finance delivery of public services, the government should strengthen its ability to domestically generate revenue.

“The government should prioritise the new fiscal space for expanding essential services such as education and health and other productive investments that will bear fruit to the domestic economy.”

https://www.theguardian.com/global-...ebt-cancelled-paris-club-creditor-nations-2bn
 
It's amazing to think there are so many people that could save a country single handedly.

That was exactly what I was thinking. Guys like Buffett, Musk, etc. could literally pay off that debt and it wouldn't affect their lives in the slightest.
I suspect the reason they have so much money is because they understand this is a flawed perspective. The way they apply their money is a more efficient way to help people, and do good, than to unscrupulously squander it on lost cause charity cases that will ultimately almost always just end up right back where they began.
 
Give em 50 years, they will probably have double the debt. If they could make a country worth a damn they would have done so by now.
 

Looks like their total debt was only $5B. Literally a war torn shit hole spends more responsibly than most western nations.
Some poor guy without any access to credit can then be said to spend responsibly?
 
They should have to take that Kick streamer Joey Somali back as part of the deal. He can stream from a pirate boat until the rest of the crew grows tired of his antics and chuck him off the boat.

Last I heard he got arrested in Japan.

The motherfucker already made plans to visit South Korea.

I can't wait to see this exciting new chapter of his life.
 
I suspect the reason they have so much money is because they understand this is a flawed perspective. The way they apply their money is a more efficient way to help people, and do good, than to unscrupulously squander it on lost cause charity cases that will ultimately almost always just end up right back where they began.
I didn't say they should pay off the debt. It's more a comment on the relative wealth of individuals to small nations. That an individual can be wealthy enough to handle the sovereign debt of a nation without any real impact on his/her life is indicative of a level of wealth that is hard for people to accurately envision.

For another example, I read somewhere that if Bill Gates had never donated his money or gotten divorced, he'd be worth more than $1 trillion dollars. That's not to say Bill shouldn't have donated, it's just crazy to think about that level of wealth controlled by a single individual.
 

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