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Low-income Countries: Debt Cancellation

06 February 2025

Lead MP

Bambos Charalambous
Southgate and Wood Green
Lab

Responding Minister

Emma Reynolds

Tags

EconomyTaxation
Word Count: 10622
Other Contributors: 9

At a Glance

Bambos Charalambous raised concerns about low-income countries: debt cancellation in Westminster Hall. A government minister responded.

Key Requests to Government:

The Government needs to compel private creditors to agree to debt relief arrangements similar to those with multilateral and bilateral creditors. Urgent legislation is required to address this issue.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Lead Contributor

Southgate and Wood Green
Opened the debate
The World Bank’s latest report stated that developing countries spent a record $1.4 trillion on servicing foreign debts, with interest payments alone soaring to $406 billion. The poorest and most vulnerable countries paid $96.2 billion in debt service costs last year, including $34.6 billion in interest, marking a fourfold increase over the past decade.

Government Response

Emma Reynolds
The Economic Secretary to the Treasury
Government Response
Acknowledged concerns raised by hon. Members and outlined three key ways the Government are addressing debt challenges: addressing liquidity challenges, ensuring effective debt restructurings, and promoting debt resilience through the G20 common framework. Emphasised the UK's role in promoting debt resilience through contractual innovations, including climate resilient debt clauses and majority voting provisions. Mentioned the development of new debt restructuring tools and ongoing work to improve debt transparency. Responded to questions on sound economic policy and preventing corruption; scale of debt treatments is set under the IMF’s debt sustainability analysis. UK committed to acting in an open and transparent way, publishing self-assessment against G20 guidelines. Emphasised working multilaterally with all international partners for sustainable solutions.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

About Westminster Hall Debates

Westminster Hall debates are a chance for MPs to raise important issues affecting their constituents and get a response from a government minister. Unlike Prime Minister's Questions, these debates are more in-depth and collaborative. The MP who secured the debate speaks first, other MPs can contribute, and a minister responds with the government's position.