• Latest
Op-Ed: Africa takes charge on debt

Op-Ed: Africa takes charge on debt

10 months ago
Rwandan military personnel during operations near the eastern DR Congo border.

US imposes visa restrictions on Rwanda officials

21 minutes ago
Nigerian lawmakers voting during a plenary session in the National Assembly in Abuja

Op-Ed: Why Nigeria’s political class keeps failing

2 hours ago
Diego Garcia military base in the Chagos Islands, a strategic UK-US facility at the centre of the Mauritius sovereignty dispute

Mauritius weighs lawsuit over UK Chagos deal delay

2 hours ago
Cyril Ramaphosa with US civil rights leader Jesse Jackson during a meeting highlighting solidarity with South Africa’s anti-apartheid struggle

Ramaphosa to speak At Jesse Jackson funeral

2 hours ago
Newmont Ahafo gold mine processing plant in Ghana, one of Africa’s largest gold mining operations

Ghana gold royalty hike sparks global pressure

2 hours ago
Digital map of Africa showing connected fintech and digital payment networks across the continent, symbolising Africa’s growing financial technology ecosystem.

Africa is building the future of fintech

2 hours ago
Ghanaian schoolgirls learning computer programming during a digital skills training session as Ghana expands AI education initiatives

Ghana partners Huawei on AI training

2 hours ago
Ethiopian Airlines aircraft on runway at Addis Ababa Bole International Airport, highlighting Africa’s growing aviation sector

AfDB launches Africa aviation investment drive

2 hours ago
Cargo ships sailing through the Red Sea shipping route as Middle East conflict threatens global trade and energy supplies

Africa hit by Middle East war fallout

1 day ago
Ghana President John Mahama and St Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Terrence Drew hold talks in Accra on visa-free travel and Africa–Caribbean cooperation

Ghana, St Kitts visa-free travel deal

1 day ago
Walter Mzembi, former Zimbabwe tourism minister, during an interview amid ongoing abuse of office trial proceedings

Zimbabwe ex-minister defends World Cup screens

1 day ago
Cassiel Ato Forson signs Ghana Belgium debt restructuring agreement with Belgian Ambassador Carole van Eyll in Accra

Ghana signs Belgium debt restructuring deal

1 day ago
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Media Kit
  • Policies and Terms
Friday, March 6, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
Africa Briefing
Data & Research Solutions
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business & Economy
  • News
  • Energy
  • Politics
    • Africa Abroad
  • Technology
  • Magazine
Subscribe for More
Africa Briefing
No Result
View All Result
Home Business & Economy

Op-Ed: Africa takes charge on debt

by Editorial Staff
10 months ago
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Op-Ed: Africa takes charge on debt
0
SHARES
9
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on WhatsApp

Keypoints:

  • Lomé summit repositions debt as a tool
  • African-led reforms challenge global norms
  • Ryder: Rewrite rules to reflect Africa’s power

AFRICAN leaders, economists, and civil society have gathered in Lomé, Togo, for a pivotal conference on debt.

In the face of rising debt servicing costs and geopolitical instability, this conference from May 12 to 14, 2025, offers Africa the chance to reset the narrative—on its own terms.

Learning from the past

Africa has been here before. In the early 1980s, African countries fell into debt crises triggered by global interest rate hikes after oil shocks.

Many of them had borrowed responsibly to invest in infrastructure and break free from colonial economic dependence.

Yet when the crisis hit, African countries found themselves unsupported.

Through the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) and the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), leaders convened debt conferences in 1984, 1985, and 1987.

They demanded an international conference on Africa’s external indebtedness, hoping for dialogue with global creditors. Those calls were ignored.

A familiar storm and worsening dynamics

Four decades later, the sense of déjà vu is overwhelming. Global shocks— trade wars, Covid-19, climate change—are driving up interest rates.

Many African nations now pay more than 10 percent interest on under-10-year sovereign bonds. Servicing expensive debt siphons funds away from development, even when original borrowing was for crucial needs, like energy or transport infrastructure.

This isn’t just a cyclical problem—it’s structural. Africa’s development needs far outpace what domestic revenues can cover.

For example, Zambia ideally needs $7–11bn annually for infrastructure—the equivalent of 26–38 percent of its GDP. With a per capita income of $1,330 and approximately 70 percent of its 20 million citizens working in the non-cash agriculture sector, trying to widen the tax base for ‘self-reliance’ is akin to either relegating the country to the world’s worst performing football league or giving up the game entirely.

Zambia is not an outlier. Most African countries need debt to develop—but better, fairer, and more affordable debt than currently available.

To put the case differently, Africa’s current external debt is well below optimal levels, yet accounts for just over 10 percent of all external debt by developing countries. It’s close to the value of Sweden’s or Brazil’s external debt. African debt is only a ‘problem’ because the financial system has – so far – intractably made it so.

A turning point in Lomé

The Lomé conference represents a long-overdue chance to flip the script. Rather than sentimentalise heavily conditional approaches like the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) programme, or stop at just adding new debt clauses or guarantees, many African leaders are now pushing for a bolder agenda that redefines the role of debt and challenges global financial norms.

Among the topics to be tackled are:

  • Debt as a strategic tool: Is debt bad, or is it a necessary tool? What are the most strategic uses of debt? What terms of concessionality and clauses should African countries demand to minimise costs of capital, including in the face of climate risks?
  • Fixing the restructuring process: What is Africa’s vision for a fairer, faster, and borrower-centric restructuring process?  Which creditors are most generous with initial terms and reprofiling negotiations? How to design a system that encourages a race to the top by creditors?
  • Tackling global bias: How do global institutions such as the IMF, World Bank and Credit Rating Agencies assess Africa and debt, and what biases need to be dismantled? What new analysis can African institutions provide about Africa, debt and the world to shape objective perspectives about Africa’s relative strengths globally?
  • Reforming Bretton Woods Institutions: How can these institutions better deliver for Africa operationally? How can Africa use of expanded governance on their boards and in the G20 to push for decisive change, even if major shareholders disagree?
  • Strengthening African financial institutions: What do African countries need to do to protect and expand Africa’s financial institutions and mechanisms such as the African Development Fund, beyond adding resources from within the continent? How can the continent accelerate progress towards an African Monetary Fund, African Investment Bank and African Central Bank?
  • Empowering the private sector: How can sovereign debt be channelled to enhance the opportunity for Africa’s private sector to grow – for example through procurement and local content rules, or regulations on Public Private Partnerships? What are Africa’s best case studies?

An African-led global plan

Convened by the African Union Commission and hosted by President Faure Gnassingbé of Togo, the conference is unapologetically Africa-first. It isn’t about asking for sympathy or salvation, but offering a new African-designed model that sees debt as a tool for progress, not a trap.

It is about presenting bold, African-led innovations – for instance Development Reimagined’s borrowers club – that address Africa’s debt not as the world’s problem, but as a structural necessity and an opportunity for global efficiency.

Crucially, Lomé’s outcomes must inform global debates, from the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development (FfD4) in Spain to the G20 in South Africa and the Jubilee 2025 year. Africa’s message is clear: it’s time for a truly new deal on debt.

As the African proverb goes, ‘Until the lion learns to write, every story will glorify the hunter.’ In Lomé, we in Africa will pick up the pen, and avoid history being repeated.

 Hannah Wanjie Ryder is the CEO of Development Reimagined 

This article first appeared on TRT Afrika

ShareTweetSend
Editorial Staff

Editorial Staff

Related Posts

Cassiel Ato Forson signs Ghana Belgium debt restructuring agreement with Belgian Ambassador Carole van Eyll in Accra

Ghana signs Belgium debt restructuring deal

by Editorial Staff
March 5, 2026
0

Keypoints: Ghana signs eighth debt restructuring agreement with OCC creditors Belgium backs Ghana’s economic recovery efforts Finance minister says stronger...

Oil tankers sailing through the Strait of Hormuz amid Iran crisis raising global energy supply concerns

Iran crisis reshapes Africa’s oil and gold outlook

by Editorial Staff
March 2, 2026
0

Keypoints: Iran crisis drives simultaneous surge in oil and gold prices African exporters gain while fuel importers face inflation pressure...

TAZARA passenger train crossing bridge between Tanzania and Zambia after cross-border service restart

TAZARA restarts Tanzania–Zambia train service

by Editorial Staff
February 28, 2026
0

Keypoints: Cross-border passenger trains resume operations Rail link strengthens tourism and trade flows Service supports regional integration ambitions THE Tanzania–Zambia...

President John Dramani Mahama delivering Ghana’s 2026 State of the Nation Address in Parliament

Mahama’s 2026 State of the Nation resets Ghana

by Editorial Staff
February 28, 2026
0

Keypoints: Mahama frames recovery as a national reset Institutional reform anchors economic strategy Ghana positioned as emerging regional middle power...

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
WhatsApp chat screen showing missed call messages feature, with a user recording a voice note after an unanswered call

WhatsApp rolls out missed call messages

December 14, 2025
Composite image showing the wreckage of vehicles after a fatal road crash in Ogun State, Nigeria, alongside an explanatory diagram illustrating seating positions inside an SUV.

Fatal Nigeria crash leaves Anthony Joshua injured

December 29, 2025
Bridge to link Africa’s twin capitals

Bridge to link Africa’s twin capitals

July 1, 2025
Hilton Worldwide announces first hotel opening in Chad

Hilton Worldwide announces first hotel opening in Chad

0
Vodafone reveals strong growth in M-Pesa transactions as it launches service in Ghana

Vodafone reveals strong growth in M-Pesa transactions as it launches service in Ghana

0
West African hotels boost security after Burkina attack

West African hotels boost security after Burkina attack

0
Rwandan military personnel during operations near the eastern DR Congo border.

US imposes visa restrictions on Rwanda officials

March 6, 2026
Nigerian lawmakers voting during a plenary session in the National Assembly in Abuja

Op-Ed: Why Nigeria’s political class keeps failing

March 6, 2026
Diego Garcia military base in the Chagos Islands, a strategic UK-US facility at the centre of the Mauritius sovereignty dispute

Mauritius weighs lawsuit over UK Chagos deal delay

March 6, 2026
Africa Briefing

© 2025 Africa Briefing

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Policies and Terms

Stay Connected

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business & Economy
  • Energy
  • Magazine
  • News
  • Politics
    • Africa Abroad
  • Technology
  • Advertise
  • Media Kit

© 2025 Africa Briefing

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00