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THE EXTERNAL DEBT OF DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION COUNTRIES

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THE EXTERNAL DEBT OF DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION COUNTRIES OECD STATISTICS History of the external debt unit 1967: Establishment of OECD s Creditor Reporting System. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE EXTERNAL DEBT OF DEVELOPING AND TRANSITION COUNTRIES


1
THE 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.

3
The external debt unit activity
  • Definition of concepts.
  • 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).

4
What 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
5
DEBT OUTSTANDING AT END-DECEMBER 2001
( millions)
Ecuador
Thailand
  • Official
  • Multilateral

3 713 627
7 550 137
Total Of Which concessional
  • Bilateral Loans

1 043 878
11 774 7 465
Total Of Which ODA/OA
  • Export credits

672 239
3 282 2 556
Non-bank Bank
  • Private

1 242
16 925
  • Bank loans and deposits

4 046
10 013
  • Debt securities
  • Other

178
8 920
Total
11 133
61 021
Of which Due within one year
13 942
1 688
6
Why 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.

7
Who are the users?
Debt management offices
Financial analysts
Debtor policy markers
Private lenders
Debtor statistical offices
Official lenders
Supervisory authorities
Aid providers
Rating agencies
8
Why 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.

9
DEBT OUTSTANDING AT END-DECEMBER 2001
( millions)
Ecuador
Thailand
  • Official
  • Multilateral

3 713 627
7 550 137
Total Of Which concessional
  • Bilateral Loans

1 043 878
11 774 7 465
Total Of Which ODA/OA
  • Export credits

672 239
3 282 2 556
Non-bank Bank
  • Private

1 242
16 925
  • Bank loans and deposits

4 046
10 013
  • Debt securities
  • Other

178
8 920
Of which Due within one year
13 942
1 688
10
Main problems and research issues
  • Black holes
  • Residual unidentified overlaps between data series
  • Nominal

/ market valuation
  • Treatment of financial centres
  • Measurement of flow data

11
Value 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.
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