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International Debt Crisis Money for Nothing?. International Debt Crisis  Developing nations owe huge amounts of money to developed countries  The debt.

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Presentation on theme: "International Debt Crisis Money for Nothing?. International Debt Crisis  Developing nations owe huge amounts of money to developed countries  The debt."— Presentation transcript:

1 International Debt Crisis Money for Nothing?

2 International Debt Crisis  Developing nations owe huge amounts of money to developed countries  The debt load is probably the single greatest impediment to reaching economic “takeoff” in a stable country  Debt service – paying just the interest – makes up a large part of developing countries budgets, often requiring more money than is spent on education or healthcare

3 International Debt Crisis  Debt is held by three main types of lenders – private lenders like commercial banks, bilateral lenders which are other governments and international agencies like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund  Private lenders are careful about where they loan their money and invest mainly in nations that are already at the “takeoff” stage of development or right on the cusp  Very poor nations, ones that are still reaching for any form of development or economic success have to rely on nation to nation loans or money from the international agencies

4 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened Loans replaced Grants  In 1957 the United States decided that all foreign aid would change from grants of money to loans  Other countries followed suit  The loans were often given with below market interest rates but they now had to be repaid, causing a financial shift for nations trying to find their feet

5 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened Abolition of the U.S. Gold Standard  In the 1970’s the U.S. abandoned the “gold standard”  This caused lots of financial uncertainty and the price of oil in particular skyrocketed  This escalation in the price of a basic economic commodity was economically devastating for many emergent countries

6 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened Explosion of PetroDollars  Because the price of oil went up so much the oil producing nations had lots of cash  They invested it in banks in developed nations  These banks loaned it to developing countries at low floating interest  The money wasn’t used for development however, it was often mainly used to buy basic needs like oil, thus making the members of OPEC even richer

7 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened Spiralling Inflation  During the late 70’s and 80’s the entire world went into an inflationary period  To combat the out of control inflation that was harming many economies nations raised interest rates dramatically  This was a disaster for developing nations  What may have been barely affordable when interest rates were 5% became an impossible burden when those rates climbed to 10, 15 or even 20%

8 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened Declining Currency Value  During the period of spiralling inflation the developing nations currencies lost significant ground to the “hard” currencies that loans are made in  This meant that servicing costs went up even futher, sometimes as much as doubling

9 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened Falling Commodity Prices  As a final insult, the main exports of most developing nations – raw materials or agricultural products – declined in value during the same period  This loss of revenue led to buying essentials (like oil) with even less internal revenue, resulting in more borrowing  Commodity prices would remain in a slump for almost 20 years

10 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened  By the mid 1980’s many developing nations were at the end of their financial rope  These countries were no longer even able to pay the interest on their loans, let alone the principal  When large debtor nations like Mexico, Argentina and Brazil threatened to default, lenders became very concerned  Because large banks had loaned so much money to developing nations any default would cause serious financial pain but a number of defaults could result in a banking system collapse that would plunge the world into a financial crisis unlike any before

11 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened  The only answer to the problem was to loan even more money to developing nations so they could pay their current debt  This support was done in the form of restructuring existing debt to be paid off over a much longer period and by lending more capital at very low rates  Much of the lending was done through international agencies like the World Bank and the IMF and it came with strings

12 International Debt Crisis – How It Happened  In order to obtain restructured debt or access new funds countries had to accept several conditions  Developing nations had to devalue their currency  They had to increase exports, often by environmentally unfriendly practices or by unsustainable resource extraction  They had to restrict their social and educational infrastructure funding  They were unable to use foreign currency to import critical needs like food and medicine  As a result of this many countries that were about to reach “takeoff” regressed significantly  Those nations are only now beginning to recover to their late 1970’s levels


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