External debt repayment suspension: we must be careful not to lose recent cedi gains – Prof. Peprah
Associate Professor of Finance at Andrews University, Professor Williams Peprah, is warning of the erosion of recent gains by the cedi if the government does not tread cautiously on negotiations of new terms with creditors of external debt.
Government today, December 19, 2022, announced the suspension of Eurobonds and other external debt payments as part of its debt restructuring programme.
This suspension, it said in a statement from the Ministry of Finance, will not include the payments of multilateral debt, new debts (whether multilateral or otherwise) contracted after December 19, 2022 or debts related to certain short term trade facilities.
But speaking in an interview on Joy news, Professor Williams Peprah, said government will have to undertake smart negotiations with its creditors because of the legal terms covering the agreements of the external debt, particularly, the Eurobonds.
“When it comes to external debtors, it requires a lot of negotiations and sometimes it takes a lot of time for them [investors] to give into what government wants to do”.
“If the government wants to get a haircut on them, a lot of negotiations must go on, sit down with anybody [investor] who has purchased the government’s Eurobonds for them to agree and then possibly accept the terms of government. The legal structure of some of the loans are very detailed and you will need a lot of technical people with the negotiation skills to be able to help government achieve what they want to do; and it takes time”.
Professor Peprah said time was running out and “if we don’t take care, the gains that we have achieved on the strengthening of the cedi will be eroded, especially with this particular news. So, we must tread very cautiously”.
He however said it was easy to negotiate with the bilateral lenders such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
“It is very easy for government to re-negotiate with the bilateral lenders. When we say bilateral lenders; they are the IMF, the World Bank. They are the ones that we are going to, so we have been asking them to give us some discount on these loans.”
“At the moment, there is about 30% of our external debt in the hands of multilateral loans. So if the government wants to achieve its debt servicing, I’m sure this option is the shortest route to get an agreement”, he added.