Friday, November 7, 2025
CommentaryBreaking the Cycle of African Debt

Breaking the Cycle of African Debt

We are entering a new era marked by profound geopolitical shifts, shrinking development assistance, rising trade barriers, and escalating global conflicts. Amid these challenges, however, lies a unique opportunity to foster new and innovative global partnerships grounded in mutually beneficial investments and shared values.

Africa should be central to any such effort. Home to some of the world’s fastest-growing economies, the continent possesses vast renewable-energy resources, including wind, solar, geothermal, and hydro, as well as over one-fifth of the world’s critical minerals, essential to the green transition. But a level playing field is vital to realizing Africa’s growth potential. That means addressing a rapidly escalating debt crisis, which threatens to unravel decades of hard-won development gains.

The scale of the crisis is staggering. In 2023 alone, low- and middle-income countries spent USD 1.4 trillion servicing external debt, with African countries often paying the highest interest rates and penalties. As a result, these countries have little choice but to divert critical resources from priorities like education, health care, and climate resilience to service exorbitant loans.

Today, more than half of African countries allocate more funding to debt servicing than health care. In Malawi, debt servicing exceeds education spending by a factor of two, meaning that a growing share of young people are effectively being sentenced to a future of ignorance, unemployability, and poverty.

From The Reporter Magazine

While African governments must commit to sound fiscal management and accountability, the continent’s debt dilemma is not merely the result of budget mismanagement or unwise borrowing. It is also rooted in structural inequities within the global financial system: African sovereign borrowers face extremely high interest rates on international capital markets – even higher than those paid by countries with similar or worse credit histories. This “Africa premium” persists despite the continent’s relatively low default rates.

Moreover, African countries do not have the option of refraining from borrowing, since many are on the front lines of a climate crisis they did not cause. Countries like Kenya, Malawi, and Mozambique have had to take on considerable debt to recover from increasingly frequent and severe natural disasters. Small island developing states like Mauritius are borrowing just to survive rising sea levels. The COVID-19 pandemic, global inflation, and surging food and energy prices have only deepened these vulnerabilities.

Now, the United States has announced steep tariffs on imports from African countries running trade surpluses with it – countries that rely on exports to finance their debt payments. Although implementation has been paused for 90 days, the impact is already being felt across the continent’s fragile economies. Making matters worse, cuts to US foreign-aid programs are set to strain essential services, slow progress toward economic recovery, and exacerbate political and social insecurity, with Africa’s most vulnerable communities suffering the most.

From The Reporter Magazine

In a deeply interconnected global economy, the consequences of such policy decisions will not remain confined to Africa. By disrupting supply chains, destabilizing economies, and hindering the energy transition, these moves will harm consumers and businesses worldwide, erode investment opportunities, and stifle potential economic growth.

Any solution to Africa’s debt crisis must address the systemic inequities built into the global financial architecture, which leave countries with little choice but to borrow at punitive rates to respond to crises they did not create. That is why I have joined seven other former African heads of state and government to form the African Leaders Debt Relief Initiative, under which we are pushing for a revamp of the global lending system to secure debt relief and improve borrowing conditions for developing economies.

In our newly launched Cape Town Declaration, we call for a large-scale debt-relief initiative grounded in fairness and transparency. This must include comprehensive debt restructuring involving all creditors – private, bilateral, and multilateral – through a predictable and inclusive process. Lower interest rates and longer repayment timelines are essential to creating fiscal space.

We also call for reforms to the global financial system focused on eliminating the “Africa premium” and strategic investments in health, education, peace-building, and climate resilience in order to advance the United Nations’ 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and the African Union’s Agenda 2063. The upcoming G20 Summit, to be held in Johannesburg in November, offers an ideal opportunity to make progress toward these goals. Already, debt sustainability is at the top of its agenda.

Debt relief for Africa is not an act of charity, but a matter of justice. We deserve a fair chance to put our houses in order, invest in our people, and contribute to global economic growth, security, and resilience – not just to repay loans that perpetuate dependency and penury. From Nigeria’s economic reforms to continent-wide responses to past debt-relief programs like the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative, we have shown our willingness and ability to make the most of such opportunities.

Half-measures will not suffice. Only by breaking the cycle of debt – with creditors treating us fairly, multilateral institutions amplifying our voices, and high-income countries fulfilling their climate-finance commitments – can we reach our full potential. This is in the world’s self-interest. After all, a strong, fast-growing Africa can play a crucial role in powering global supply chains, driving innovation, and advancing the green-energy transition.

The Cape Town Declaration is our roadmap. The question is: Will the world walk this path with us?

(Olusegun Obasanjo, Chair of the African Leaders Debt Relief Initiative, is a former president of Nigeria.)

Contributed by Olusegun Obasanjo

Sponsored Contents

Real Estate Apartment Installments in Addis Ababa: What You Should Know About Buying with Temer Properties.

Owning a home in Addis Ababa has become more achievable than ever thanks to flexible installment plans offered by developers such as Temer Properties....

Sudan Notifies Its Committees of Including Hala’ib in Egypt Ahead of Border Demarcation Talks with Saudi Arabia

By: Muhamed Abdalazeem A French report has confirmed that the ongoing negotiations between Saudi Arabia and Sudan regarding the demarcation of their maritime borders will...
VISIT OUR WEBSITEspot_img

Most Read

More like this
Related

Investment Holdings Oversees Leadership Overhaul at Ethiopian Construction Works Corp

Corporation set to pay dividends for the first time The...

Chambers of Commerce Locked in Dispute over Rights to Mexico Square Headquarters

The Ethiopian Chamber of Commerce and Sectoral Associations (ECCSA)...

Authority Orders CSOs to Register Assets Before November Deadline

The Authority for Civil Society Organizations has ordered domestic...

Short-Term Appetite Drives Ethiopia’s Debt Market as Domestic Liabilities Hit 2.56 Trillion Birr

Ethiopia’s domestic debt stock climbed to 2.56 trillion by...