Debt Transparency in Developing Economies

Analyzing public debt in low-income developing countries (LIDCs) is like solving a puzzle with many missing pieces. Forty percent of LIDCs have not published any sovereign debt data in the last two years. Public debt data disclosed in different publications show discrepancies of up to 30 percent of GDP across sources, and relative to the records of relevant authorities. Over 15 LIDCs have outstanding collateralized debt but no details of the collateralization are provided in official statistics. Restructuring of bilateral and commercial debt is often handled privately. All these problems have different origins and implications. Yet, they all amount to a lack of transparency. The international community has become acutely aware of the importance of debt transparency after recent cases of "hidden debt" The "Tuna Bond" case in Mozambique highlighted the dangers of inadequate debt transparency. In 2016 two large previously unreported loans totaling 1.15 billion US Dollars —equal to about 9 percent of the country’s GDP—were revealed. As a result, donor support was frozen, the economy plunged, and the government was forced to make deep cuts in public spending. The biggest losers were poor Mozambiquans. Nontransparent public debt can quickly alter the lives of millions of ordinary citizens. This report is the first comprehensive assessment of debt transparency in LIDCs. It presents a complete picture of the current challenges and the pending policy agenda for all stakeholders. It draws upon new databases and surveys to take stock of key gaps in debt reporting, borrowing practices and legal frameworks, offering a detailed and timely view on the current state of debt transparency in LIDCs. It also synthesizes recent studies and policy discussions on debt transparency and offers practical policy recommendations required to further improve debt transparency in LIDCs.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rivetti, Diego
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021-10-01
Subjects:PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT, DEBT TRANSPARENCY, DEBT DATA DISCLOSURE, DOMESTIC DEBT, EXTERNAL DEBT, CENTRAL BANK REPOS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/743881635526394087/Debt-Transparency-in-Developing-Economies
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36505
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spelling dig-okr-10986365052021-11-09T05:10:43Z Debt Transparency in Developing Economies Rivetti, Diego PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT DEBT TRANSPARENCY DEBT DATA DISCLOSURE DOMESTIC DEBT EXTERNAL DEBT CENTRAL BANK REPOS Analyzing public debt in low-income developing countries (LIDCs) is like solving a puzzle with many missing pieces. Forty percent of LIDCs have not published any sovereign debt data in the last two years. Public debt data disclosed in different publications show discrepancies of up to 30 percent of GDP across sources, and relative to the records of relevant authorities. Over 15 LIDCs have outstanding collateralized debt but no details of the collateralization are provided in official statistics. Restructuring of bilateral and commercial debt is often handled privately. All these problems have different origins and implications. Yet, they all amount to a lack of transparency. The international community has become acutely aware of the importance of debt transparency after recent cases of "hidden debt" The "Tuna Bond" case in Mozambique highlighted the dangers of inadequate debt transparency. In 2016 two large previously unreported loans totaling 1.15 billion US Dollars —equal to about 9 percent of the country’s GDP—were revealed. As a result, donor support was frozen, the economy plunged, and the government was forced to make deep cuts in public spending. The biggest losers were poor Mozambiquans. Nontransparent public debt can quickly alter the lives of millions of ordinary citizens. This report is the first comprehensive assessment of debt transparency in LIDCs. It presents a complete picture of the current challenges and the pending policy agenda for all stakeholders. It draws upon new databases and surveys to take stock of key gaps in debt reporting, borrowing practices and legal frameworks, offering a detailed and timely view on the current state of debt transparency in LIDCs. It also synthesizes recent studies and policy discussions on debt transparency and offers practical policy recommendations required to further improve debt transparency in LIDCs. 2021-11-08T19:54:10Z 2021-11-08T19:54:10Z 2021-10-01 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/743881635526394087/Debt-Transparency-in-Developing-Economies http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36505 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Debt and Creditworthiness Study
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT
DEBT TRANSPARENCY
DEBT DATA DISCLOSURE
DOMESTIC DEBT
EXTERNAL DEBT
CENTRAL BANK REPOS
PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT
DEBT TRANSPARENCY
DEBT DATA DISCLOSURE
DOMESTIC DEBT
EXTERNAL DEBT
CENTRAL BANK REPOS
spellingShingle PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT
DEBT TRANSPARENCY
DEBT DATA DISCLOSURE
DOMESTIC DEBT
EXTERNAL DEBT
CENTRAL BANK REPOS
PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT
DEBT TRANSPARENCY
DEBT DATA DISCLOSURE
DOMESTIC DEBT
EXTERNAL DEBT
CENTRAL BANK REPOS
Rivetti, Diego
Debt Transparency in Developing Economies
description Analyzing public debt in low-income developing countries (LIDCs) is like solving a puzzle with many missing pieces. Forty percent of LIDCs have not published any sovereign debt data in the last two years. Public debt data disclosed in different publications show discrepancies of up to 30 percent of GDP across sources, and relative to the records of relevant authorities. Over 15 LIDCs have outstanding collateralized debt but no details of the collateralization are provided in official statistics. Restructuring of bilateral and commercial debt is often handled privately. All these problems have different origins and implications. Yet, they all amount to a lack of transparency. The international community has become acutely aware of the importance of debt transparency after recent cases of "hidden debt" The "Tuna Bond" case in Mozambique highlighted the dangers of inadequate debt transparency. In 2016 two large previously unreported loans totaling 1.15 billion US Dollars —equal to about 9 percent of the country’s GDP—were revealed. As a result, donor support was frozen, the economy plunged, and the government was forced to make deep cuts in public spending. The biggest losers were poor Mozambiquans. Nontransparent public debt can quickly alter the lives of millions of ordinary citizens. This report is the first comprehensive assessment of debt transparency in LIDCs. It presents a complete picture of the current challenges and the pending policy agenda for all stakeholders. It draws upon new databases and surveys to take stock of key gaps in debt reporting, borrowing practices and legal frameworks, offering a detailed and timely view on the current state of debt transparency in LIDCs. It also synthesizes recent studies and policy discussions on debt transparency and offers practical policy recommendations required to further improve debt transparency in LIDCs.
format Report
topic_facet PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT
DEBT TRANSPARENCY
DEBT DATA DISCLOSURE
DOMESTIC DEBT
EXTERNAL DEBT
CENTRAL BANK REPOS
author Rivetti, Diego
author_facet Rivetti, Diego
author_sort Rivetti, Diego
title Debt Transparency in Developing Economies
title_short Debt Transparency in Developing Economies
title_full Debt Transparency in Developing Economies
title_fullStr Debt Transparency in Developing Economies
title_full_unstemmed Debt Transparency in Developing Economies
title_sort debt transparency in developing economies
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021-10-01
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/743881635526394087/Debt-Transparency-in-Developing-Economies
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36505
work_keys_str_mv AT rivettidiego debttransparencyindevelopingeconomies
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