Thursday, November 14, 2019
Assess some of the ways in which Third World Debt might be reduced. Ess
Assess some of the ways in which Third World Debt might be reduced.    Despite the overwhelming number of statistics and indicators, global  poverty is as hard to measure as it is to conceptualize. One fact is  undeniable: someone is going to have to pay for past debts. It could  be the people in debtor countries, or the banks, or the people in  advanced industrial countries. Most likely it will be some combination  of these three groups. In the last ten years, there have been a  variety of proposals which, unfortunately, usually reflect only the  special interests of the groups proposing them. Generally speaking,  these solutions fall into three categories: repudiation, minor  adjustments in repayments, or reduction.    A report ââ¬Å"Relief Works: African proposals for debt cancellation - and  why debt relief worksâ⬠ examines public spending in 10 African  countries which have benefited from debt cancellation. It reveals that  total spending on education in these countries has increased, and is  now twice the amount that is being paid to foreign creditors. The  story is similar with spending on health, which has risen by 70 per  cent since before debt relief, and is now one third higher than  spending on debt repayments. And contrary to the views of sceptics,  debt relief is not being used to fuel military expenditure. The report  presents these clear indications of the positive difference that debt  cancellation can make as the strongest argument there is in favour of  further debt relief for the world's poorest countries.    However, various G8 Summits have seen promises of billions in  debt-write off, but almost hardly are carried out, or contain a lot of  spin. For example, a lot of debt relief promised may include moneys  previously annouced for such purposes, thus creating an impression of  enormous write-offs. Bilateral debt relief also does not typically  release actual money to be used for other purposes. Multilateral debt  relief, however, could.    Debt repudiation, in the sense of a unilateral cessation of repayment,  occurred in a number of countries: Bolivia, Brazil, Costa Rica,  Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, and Peru.  With the exception of the Peruvian cessation, however, most of these  actions have been taken with assurances that the stoppages were only  temporary. Peru announced that it was unilaterally limiting its ...              ... and abysmal poverty as a normal  condition. This need not, and should not, be the case. The developed  countries have a responsibility to create conditions whereby the  poorer countries can interact more productively in international  economic activities: their single most important contribution to this  end might be in the area of reducing trade restrictions on the  products of poorer countries. Similarly, the developing countries have  a responsibility to see that money is more effectively utilized within  their own borders. The obscene personal profits accumulated by such  leaders as Marcos of the Philippines and Mobutu of Zaire should not be  fostered by the strategic interests of other countries. The banks  should also face up to the fact that their single-minded pursuit of  profits almost led them to the brink of bankruptcy. The lesson to be  learned from this experience is that for economic growth to be  sustained, close attention must be paid to the mutual interests of all  parties involved. Only after sustained economic growth returns to the  heavily indebted countries can the international community even begin  to determine manageable rates and methods of debt repayment.                      
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