Title: THE EXTERNAL DEBT OF DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION COUNTRIES
1THE EXTERNAL DEBT OF DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION
COUNTRIES
OECD STATISTICS
2 History of the external debt unit
- 1967 Establishment of OECDs Creditor Reporting
System. - 1984 BIS-OECD initiative to combine and jointly
publish their creditor statistics on countries
external debt . - 1999 Broadening of previous agreement to include
IMF and WB data under Joint Publication. - 2003 transfer from DCD to STD.
3The external debt unit activity
- Development of methodology.
- Collection of primary data from bilateral and
multilateral creditors.
- Collection of creditor and debtor data from
international compilers.
- Standardisation and consolidation of data from
multiple sources.
- Interpretation and dissemination of data.
- Participation in related international fora
(TFFS, Paris Club).
4What is external debt?
- Gross external debt, at any given time, is the
outstanding amount of those actual current, and
not contingent, liabilities that require
payment(s) of principal and/or interest by the
debtor at some point(s) in the futures and that
are owed to non- residents by residents of an
economy.
Gross
liabilities
current
current
residents
Nominal
Immediate risk
5DEBT OUTSTANDING AT END-DECEMBER 2001
( millions)
Ecuador
Thailand
3 713 627
7 550 137
Total Of Which concessional
1 043 878
11 774 7 465
Total Of Which ODA/OA
672 239
3 282 2 556
Non-bank Bank
1 242
16 925
4 046
10 013
178
8 920
Total
11 133
61 021
Of which Due within one year
13 942
1 688
6Why external debt statistics?
- To provide financial stability indicators
-
- To monitor debt finance for development.
- To assess countries debt sustainability.
- To provide indicators of vulnerability to
crisis.
7Who are the users?
Debt management offices
Financial analysts
Debtor policy markers
Private lenders
Debtor statistical offices
Official lenders
Supervisory authorities
Aid providers
Rating agencies
8Why a creditor based approach to external debt?
- Produces data which are comprehensive and
comparable - across countries and over time.
- Exploits existing sources of multi-purpose
collection systems - run by international agencies.
- Provides a perspective not obtainable from
debtor data.
- Provides useful reference for debtor
compilers. -
9DEBT OUTSTANDING AT END-DECEMBER 2001
( millions)
Ecuador
Thailand
3 713 627
7 550 137
Total Of Which concessional
1 043 878
11 774 7 465
Total Of Which ODA/OA
672 239
3 282 2 556
Non-bank Bank
1 242
16 925
4 046
10 013
178
8 920
Of which Due within one year
13 942
1 688
10Main problems and research issues
- Residual unidentified overlaps between data series
/ market valuation
- Treatment of financial centres
11Value added of work
- Builds on, often confidential,
- data from multiple national and international
sources.
- Contributes to international financial
transparency.
- Responds to public demand.
-
- Deals with methodological and conceptual issues
- relevant to other financial statistics.