What can the G20 summit do to address Africa’s debt crisis? | DW News

What can the G20 summit do to address Africa’s debt crisis? | DW News



What can the G20 summit do to address Africa’s debt crisis? We ask South Africa’s finance minister as the city of Johannesburg prepares to host the meeting for the first time on African soil. Plus, a look at how the burden of debt is widening social and economic inequality across communities.

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47 thoughts on “What can the G20 summit do to address Africa’s debt crisis? | DW News

  1. Debt is not part of African economic epistemy as it is abhored. However with integration process of the capitalist world it has been accepted as part of development matrix but not yet well explicated to match African culture

  2. Africa has horrible leadership and is corrupt. The debt is already out of control because of this. So why should the rest of the world continue to pump money into a mess.

  3. Irony of him talking about a debt trap and South Africa has taken several loans from IMF and WB in the past year under the Ramaphosa presiedency, for municipalities and electricity. We need to not have loans that push for privatisation of public goods in a country with the highest employment in the world. Why not diversify on our debts with China and other countries instead of just the neocolonial Bretton Woods agencies? Surely we would have better negotiating space if we diversify who we lend from? Why can we not reduce dependency on debt?

  4. Africa is in debt because it’s unable and unwilling to collect taxes. It’s unwilling to collect taxes because that means its governments will actually have to do its job and deliver services to its people this will also mean that it will have to introduce serious political and economic reforms that completely destroy the current power structures in place. Those in power don’t want the power structure to change. This is the vicious cycle Africa has been in for about 70 years now. Taxes bring accountability, African leaders don’t want accountability.

  5. Your Excellencies,
    Distinguished Representatives of the G20 International Organization,

    I wish to extend my respectful greetings and express my appreciation for the continued commitment demonstrated by the G20 in promoting global economic stability and strengthening multilateral cooperation. The role played by your organization has been particularly vital in addressing the structural challenges faced by developing nations, especially in Africa, where the burden of external debt continues to undermine the continent’s social and economic progress.

    The persistent difficulties that many African countries encounter in servicing their debts to multilateral financial institutions are not merely fiscal challenges; they reflect a deeper inequality in the global financial system that perpetuates cycles of dependency and restricts the capacity for autonomous development. For this reason, it is of utmost importance that the G20 reinforces its financial support and implements flexible mechanisms that allow indebted countries to restructure their obligations under sustainable and inclusive conditions.

    Efforts to mitigate Africa’s debt crisis should not be seen exclusively as acts of financial relief, but rather as strategic investments in global stability. A continent constrained by the weight of unsustainable debt cannot allocate sufficient resources to health, education, housing, infrastructure, or environmental resilience. Consequently, social inequalities deepen, and the prospects for long-term development become increasingly distant. The G20, with its unique influence and capacity for cross-border coordination, is in a privileged position to promote transformative change.

    Concrete actions—such as concessional financing, extended repayment deadlines, reduced interest rates, debt-for-development swaps, and new investment guarantee frameworks—would enable African countries not only to meet their international obligations, but also to redirect resources toward structural transformation. These measures would accelerate the transition to sustainable economies, strengthen productive capacity, and enhance resilience against global shocks.

    Furthermore, strengthening Africa’s macroeconomic fundamentals requires far more than debt alleviation; it requires robust investment in modern and adaptable infrastructure, capable of promoting regional integration and facilitating the mobility of goods, services, people, and technology. This is essential for building cities and communities that offer dignified living conditions and long-term economic opportunities.

    By supporting African nations in this effort, the G20 would advance its own objectives of global financial stability, equitable development, and stronger cooperation between advanced and emerging economies. The progress of Africa is inseparable from the progress of the world. A continent with growing demographics, abundant natural resources, and rising entrepreneurial capacity is indispensable to global prosperity.

    It is also crucial that policies designed by the G20 incorporate a framework of shared responsibility, transparency, and governance reforms, ensuring that financial support effectively promotes development and reduces inequalities. Africa does not request charity but equitable partnership—one that recognizes its potential and supports its pursuit of sustainable growth.

    In this context, I respectfully urge the G20 to deepen its collaboration with African governments, regional institutions, and civil society, so that financing solutions reflect the real needs of the populations affected by the debt crisis. Doing so would pave the way for a more just, inclusive, and balanced global economic order.

    I express my sincere gratitude for your attention to this matter of great urgency and reaffirm the belief that the G20’s leadership will continue to play an essential role in promoting economic justice, reducing social inequalities, and ensuring that Africa becomes a continent of opportunity, stability, and shared prosperity for present and future generations.

    Respectfully
    Luís Lopes

  6. "same fiscal and financial metrics as us"…..yes but only one of them has a history/threatened/ has put into law, the threat of expropriation without compensation, and one is significantly less corrupt than the other. doesn't take a genius to understand that africa is more dangerous to invest in compared to Asia or the balkans.

  7. The argument is that because the country looks similar to others and doesn't get funding because of stereotype is nonsense. Africa on average is a lot more unstable, and having lots of unstable neighbors is also part of the risk rating, it's not just how does your own country look.
    Most conflicts are in Africa or the middle east. You can basically map the high risk to default with has had conflicts since 2000. Africa and the middle east also top the charts for a lot of corruption indexes.

  8. If you keep making those claims about financial cases are similar, then you should back it up with data. Why should Africa get more members on the IMF board if it doesn't contribute to it? That doesn't make any sense.

  9. There is no stereotype in Moody's & Standard & Poor Ratings because its equally applied to corporate bonds. If you borrow money for stealing, kickbacks, and self-awarded contracts like Kenya, where will the project's revenue come from? Its called project/growth finance because revenues flow from those projects.

  10. Not sure why during the introduction, you are grouping high interest lenders with China. The average interest rate of China's loans to African countries is 2.7% Is that high interest rate?

  11. The real problem is not the debt, the real problem is CORRUPTION ! How do you want a foreign country/company invest in a corrupted country ? Stop blaming others.

  12. Enternal victims, Europe was destroyed after WWII and paid all the loans back amd rebuilt itself. But Africa want free money and loan forgiveness… No you have to pay it back in one way or another

  13. When anyone borrows, the proceeds must be treated like treasure. It must be invested productively. None can be wasted. None can be stolen. When African countries borrow, the lenders don't follow the money . . it is the borrowers responsibility to spend ever penny wisely.

  14. Poor and without infrastructures, aiports, seaports, schools, hospitals

    Poor but with infrastructures, airports, seaports, schools, hospitals, future growth potential.

    Its easy choice.

  15. Corruption in Africa was a desired outcome for the US and many western governments.

    It allows them to extract wealth from US based companies operating in Africa and prevents African economies nationalising profits from their own resources. Just look into CIA interference in African politics which tells you this was exactly as planned.

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