The UK must step up and meet its moral responsibility to avert debt crises in developing countries that are often struggling to recover in the wake of humanitarian emergencies, a new report by Christian Aid has said.
The early 2000s saw a major round of debt relief for countries caught in a trap of debt repayments, in response to the Jubilee 2000 campaigns. Since the western financial crisis of 2008, there has been another boom in irresponsible lending to countries of the global south. Global debt rose to record levels in 2016 and this lending boom is threatening to set a new debt trap for people in poverty around the world.
Launched as part of Christian Aid Week (12 – 18 May 2019), the report The New Global Debt Crisis – published in collaboration with the Jubilee Debt Campaign – is urging the UK Government to end its complicity in exacerbating the already desperate situations faced by some of the world’s poorest countries.
One such example is Sierra Leone, which had little choice but to accept loans from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help it cope with the Ebola crisis which struck in 2014, killing nearly 4,000 people by January 2016, and 10 per cent of the country’s health workers.
These large repayments inhibit the government of Sierra Leone from being able to look after the basic needs of its own citizens. The West African country lacks funds for proper health clinics, health training and enough ambulances, making it the most dangerous place in the world to become a mum.
Christian Aid is appealing to the whole international community to find urgent solutions, but particularly to the UK Government which has a disproportionate role in the debt crisis. Almost half of international loans are owed under English law for which the UK parliament has responsibility.
Laura Taylor, Christian Aid’s director of policy and public affairs, said: “It is shocking that developing countries find themselves yet again on the brink of a global debt crisis, 15 years after the last major round of debt relief. Countries like Sierra Leone, the most dangerous place in the world to become a mum, face huge debt repayments which deprive them of resources to protect their own citizens.
"It is unacceptable for the UK Government to be complicit in this new debt crisis, which sees some of the poorest countries in the world struggling and unable to get back on their feet following major humanitarian emergencies.
“The UK has a strong history of helping these countries when they are most in need; but too often the lack of transparency in the loans means we are giving with one hand and taking away with the other. It’s time we played our part in ending this new debt crisis rather than exacerbating it. It is already having a serious impact on the lives of some of the world’s most vulnerable, which is why in this report, we are calling for urgent action to be taken.”
Campaigners in churches across the country are joining Christian Aid in calling on the UK to use its influence with the IMF to ensure all Sierra Leone’s debts on the loans the country received for fighting the Ebola outbreak are written off.
The UK has direct responsibility for many loans which are given under English law, putting the solution in the hands of UK lawmakers. Therefore, Christian Aid is urging that:
- UK law is urgently changed to ensure that loans given under UK law, or by British-based banks, are transparent.
- Vulture funds are banned from profiting via the new debt crisis through UK courts.
* Read The New Global Debt Crisis here
* Christian Aid https://www.christianaid.org.uk/
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