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As Zimbabwe attempts to lift itself out of
a punishing debt crisis, it is asking for “deep haircuts” from its creditors,
including China, according to its finance minister, Professor Mthuli Ncube.
But analysts say China is “not in the
business of haircuts” and is unlikely to accept any reduction of the debt it is
owed.
Ncube is seeking help from creditors to
address the US$19.2 billion that the country owes, of which US$13 billion is
external debt and US$6.2 billion is domestic. Most of the debt was accrued
during the era of late former president Robert Mugabe – and most has remained
unpaid for decades.
“Zimbabwe is currently in debt distress due
to the accumulation of external debt payment arrears amounting to US$6.7
billion,” Ncube said.
“The external debt overhang is weighing
heavily on the country’s development needs due to lack of access to
international financial resources to finance Zimbabwe’s economic recovery and
priority projects.”
“We are looking for a lot of haircuts …
very deep haircuts and elimination of all penalties.”
According to Zimbabwe’s debt registry,
bilateral external debt stands at US$6.2 billion but US$4.7 billion of the
amount is in arrears – about 76 per cent of the total bilateral debt.
Harare owes US$4.1 billion to Paris Club
creditors – an informal grouping of mainly Western creditor nations focused on
sustainable debt-relief solutions. However most of that debt – about 98 per
cent or US$4 billion – has been in default since Zimbabwe fell into financial
hardship two decades ago.
At that time, the nation was shut out of
international financial markets, including the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and the World Bank, following sanctions imposed on Mugabe’s government by
the US and other Western countries, largely in response to land seizures forced
on white farmers – the fallout of which is still being felt today.
Zimbabwe’s biggest five Paris Club
creditors are Germany, France, Britain, Japan and the US, accounting for US$3.1
billion or 75 per cent of the Paris Club debt.
The country also owes non-Paris Club
creditors, such as China, US$2.1 billion, of which about a third is in arrears.
Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube has asked for
help from creditors as he tries to address Zimbabwe’s towering debt burden.
Photo: AFP
Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube has asked for
help from creditors as he tries to address Zimbabwe’s towering debt burden.
Photo: AFP
Andrew Bvumbe, head of Zimbabwe’s Public
Debt Management Office, confirmed that the southern African nation owes China
US$2 billion.
“We are in discussions with all creditors,”
Ncube said in an interview on the sidelines of the African Development Bank
annual meetings held in Kenyan capital Nairobi in May.
As part of fixing its financial distress,
Harare is planning to make far-reaching economic and governance reforms in the
hope it will then be able to access international financial markets. To that
end, in 2022, the country established a Structured Dialogue Platform for its
arrears clearance, debt relief and resolution with creditors and development
partners in order meet and talk through such reforms.
The process to resolving the crisis is
being championed by former Mozambican president Joaquim Chissano and African
Development Bank president Akinwumi Adesina.
But it suffered a blow in March when the US
withdrew its support, accusing Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s
administration of being reluctant to make reforms.
The US has since terminated previous
sanctions against Zimbabwe and instead imposed new sanctions under the Global
Magnitsky framework on 11 individuals and three entities, including Mnangagwa
and his allies, who now face asset freezes and travel bans.
America first implemented sanctions against
Zimbabwe in 2001 in response to a controversial forced land seizure of farms
under the direction of Robert Mugabe. Nearly 4,000 white commercial farmers in
the country were evicted from their land, often violently, between the years
2000 and 2001.
At the time, the US imposed targeted
sanctions against selected Zimbabwean officials. More sanctions from the
European Union followed in 2002, effectively cutting the country off from
access to funds from international markets, including multilateral lenders such
as the IMF and the World Bank.
In a bid to rid itself of the long shadow
of the Mugabe land seizures, Harare has since committed to implementing
sweeping reforms, including a total US$3.5 billion in planned compensation for
evicted farmers, with US$55 million allocated in the 2024 budget for this
purpose.
Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa has
been personally named under new sanctions from the US, which means he now faces
asset freezes and travel bans. Photo: EPA-EFE
Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa has
been personally named under new sanctions from the US, which means he now faces
asset freezes and travel bans. Photo: EPA-EFE
As lead negotiator in the debt dialogue
process, Chissano said 80 per cent of the country’s debt was in arrears.
“Clearing arrears and solving the debt
crisis is critical not only for Zimbabwe but also for the SADC [Southern
African Development Community],” he said.
He added that progress had been made in the
reform agenda, such as the introduction of a new currency – the ZiG, which was
rolled out in May and is pegged to a specific exchange rate or currency basket
and backed by a bundle of foreign exchange assets, including gold – and the
planned compensation of former farmers, starting this June.
However, he said the Zimbabwean government
cannot implement the reforms alone and called on international partners to
consider providing help.
China, which previously criticised the US
for its sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe, has said it is committed to helping
Harare solve its debt troubles.
“China firmly opposes any unilateral
sanctions and supports Zimbabwe in safeguarding its sovereignty and its right
to development,” Chinese ambassador to Zimbabwe Zhou Ding said.
In April, Zimbabwean media reported that
China had written-off an “unspecified” amount of interest-free loans taken on
during Mugabe’s presidency.
“China attaches great importance to
resolving Zimbabwe’s debt issues,” Zhou said at the time. “China would like to
enhance communication with the Zimbabwean government to work out proper
statements through friendly consultation. As a concrete measure, China has
cancelled Zimbabwe’s interest-free loans, which matured by the end of 2015.”
The ambassador did not disclose the amount of loans written off.
But more recently, Bvumbe said there has
not been any debt cancellation from China. “I checked with the embassy when it
was reported,” he said. “They didn’t say anything about debt cancellation.”
The Asian economic giant is the biggest
investor in the country’s mining industry with Chinese companies having pumped
more than US$1 billion into the acquisition of lithium ore sites in the recent
past. The firms have spent millions of dollars to build lithium processing
plants – turning Harare into a major source of the metal that is essential for
making electric vehicle batteries amid the global transition to green energy.
01:35
China prepares to give US$140 million
parliament building to Zimbabwe
China prepares to give US$140 million
parliament building to Zimbabwe
Zhou said the lithium mining industry is
growing rapidly, offering Zimbabwe an opportunity to take up a position in the
global new energy industry chain.
“I believe that the Zimbabwean government
will continue to make efforts to create a favourable business environment to
make the mining sector bigger and stronger. And I hope that the Chinese
companies will continue their investments in Zimbabwe’s mining sector, based on
Zimbabwe’s needs and market principle,” Zhou said.
Besides lithium, Chinese companies have
vast interests in tobacco farming and processing. As well as that, Chinese
loans have built Hwange Power Station Unit 7 and 8, Kariba South Power Station,
the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport expansion project, and Victoria
Falls Airport upgrading project, among others.
But while Ncube may be asking for
“haircuts” from Zimbabwe’s creditors, Charlie Robertson, head of macro strategy
at asset management firm FIM Partners, said it is unlikely China would be
willing to shave anything off what it is owed.
“China is always reluctant to accept a cut
in debt it is owed, but is amenable to suspensions of interest and principal
repayments,” Robertson said.
It is a sentiment echoed by sub-Saharan
geoeconomic analyst Aly-Khan Satchu.
“China will surely be supportive but is not
in the business of haircuts and cancellations,” Satchu said.
“Zimbabwe has a valuable balance sheet,
illiquid admittedly, but they too can negotiate a minerals-for-debt swap,”
Satchu said.
He said the biggest challenge for the
Mnangagwa government remains the negative spillover emanating from the Mugabe
era.
“The current regime has been unable to
thread that needle until now,” Satchu said.
“It is clear that some kind of properly
funded compensation programme could square that circle and then the government
could enter into negotiations.”
Satchu said Zimbabwe is rich in the
minerals that will power the new economy and opening up the mining sector in a
transparent manner could be a quid pro quo for reaching a debt deal.