An “explosion” in corporate and household debt across the developing world since the financial crisis has left some of the world’s poorest countries with little protection against Donald Trump’s trade wars and a slowdown in global growth. the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (Unctad) warned.
In its annual health check on the global economy that while governments had kept a lid on their debts, private corporations were behind a dramatic increase in developing-world debts. Since 2008, global debt has soared from $142tn to $250tn, which is three times the combined income of every nation. Unctad said that this situation was worse than expected after global incomes failed to keep pace with rising debt levels.
The report found that the ratio of global debt to GDP is one third higher than in 2008 before the crash. And the situation was much worse in developed-world countries that had borrowed heavily in recent years from western banks offering ultra-cheap short-term loans.
“Private debt has exploded, especially in emerging markets and developing countries, whose share of global debt stock increased from 7% in 2007 to 26% in 2017,” it said. Over the same period, the ratio of debts racked up by non-financial businesses in emerging markets increased from 56% in 2008 to 105%.
Turkey and Argentina are among a group of nations that have suffered a severe economic shock since the US Federal Reserve began increasing interest rates, which pushed up borrowing costs to their largest businesses. Argentina was forced last month to request aid from the International Monetary Fund while many investors have taken bets that Turkey will soon follow suit. African countries, including Zambia, are on a watchlist at the IMF’s headquarters in case they also find they are unable to pay interest bills on their ballooning debts. The likelihood of an escalation in trade war between the US, China and Europe, and slower global growth still left them vulnerable to defaulting on their rising interest bills.
The report also argued that developing-world countries were suffering at the hands of global corporations, most them based in the developed world. It said: “Recent evidence from non-oil exports shows that, within the restricted circle of exporting firms, the top 1% accounted for 57% of country exports on average in 2014. The distribution of exports is thus highly skewed in favour of the largest firms.” After the global financial crisis, according to the report, the five largest exporting firms, on average, accounted for 30% of a country’s total exports, and the 10 largest exporting firms for 42%.
“This sheer size reinforced the gradual dilution of social and political accountability of large corporations to national constituencies and labour around the world,” it said.
Free-trade zones, often near coastal towns and port cities, have played a part in offering multinational companies a virtually tax-free base from which to assemble manufactured goods such as cars, fridges and cookers.
Unctad said: “The increase in profits of large “superstar” firms has been a major driver of global inequality, widening the gap between a small number of big winners and a large collection of smaller companies and workers that are being squeezed.”
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