Poorest states face $220bn spending cuts

Some of the world’s poorest countries face budget cuts topping $220 billion over the coming five years due to a debt crisis that has pushed dozens to the brink of default, according to an Oxfam International report released on Monday. Oxfam’s report, released at the start of the IMF-World Bank meetings in Marrakesh and drawing on IMF outlooks, also found that on current terms, low- and lower-middle-income countries face nearly half a billion dollars a day in interest and debt repayments through 2029. A record number of developing nations are in debt distress as rising global interest rates, soaring inflation and a series of economic shocks following the Covid-19 pandemic hammer state finances. Ratings agency Fitch said that as of March, there have been 14 separate default events since 2020 across nine different sovereigns. Oxfam called on the IMF and the World Bank to use the crisis to create a fairer system - rather than focusing on debt restructuring and spending cuts.