Gajreport

Global debt edges to fresh record, populism could push it higher – IIF

The financial services trade group, Institute of International Finance (IIF) estimated that global debt will hit $310 trillion by the end of the year, a more than 25% increase in five years, and warned that a shift towards political populism could push debt even higher next year.

Emre Tiftik, director of Sustainable Research at the IIF, counted more than 50 elections coming in 2024, including the United States, India, South Africa, Turkey, and Pakistan.

“In the face of increasing political polarization and heightened geopolitical tensions, these forthcoming elections might pave the way for populist policies,” he said, adding it could increase government borrowing and spending, and loosen fiscal discipline.

“This can create further volatility in the markets,” Tiftik said in a press briefing to present the report. He also warned that servicing debt was consuming an increasing chunk of revenues worldwide, and had hit “alarming” levels in Pakistan and Egypt. In the United States, government interest expenses are projected to hit 15% of revenue by 2026, up from less than 10% currently.

Two-thirds of last quarter’s debt increase came from developed markets, led by the United States, Japan, France, and the United Kingdom. Emerging markets China, India, Brazil, and Mexico also notched sharp increases. While the global debt-to-GDP ratio was little changed at 333%, it hit 255% in emerging markets – 32 percentage points above the same period five years ago – driven by Russia, China, Saudi Arabia, and Malaysia. Chile, Colombia, and Ghana experienced the largest declines in the ratio.

The IIF said government debt had the biggest increase in the third quarter, adding that budget deficits remain well above pre-pandemic levels in many countries.

The report noted that sovereign debt in default hit a record high above $554 billion through the end of 2022, roughly half of which is bonded debt.

The IIF warned that the debt burden for households and corporations is still rising in major economies, including China and the United States, with ramifications for everything from elections to the clean energy transition.

“With firms’ borrowing appetite at multi-year lows amid still-tightening funding conditions and heightened geoeconomic fragmentation, the prospects for climate finance look increasingly at risk in recent quarters, as evidenced by a marked slowdown in ESG debt issuance,” it said.

Source: www.devdiscourse.com

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