China as a Lender of Last Resort

Beijing's high interest loans have been criticized for creating ā€œdebt trapsā€ for cash-strapped borrowers.

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Chinese Rescue Lending
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China has become a major rescue lender for heavily indebted countries. In 2022, loans to countries in debt distress accounted for 60 percent of Chinaā€™s overseas lending portfolio ā€“ up sharply from just 5 percent in 2010.

Over the past two decades, Chinese institutions have provided $240 billion in rescue lending to 22 developing countries. Of that sum, $170 billion was provided through the Peopleā€™s Bank of Chinaā€™s swap line network ā€“ a system whereby central banks agree to exchange currencies. The rest was offered through other means such as bridge loans or balance of payments support by Chinese state-owned banks and enterprises, including the China Development Bank. They’re provided, generally with high interest rates, mostly to middle-income countries, which account for four-fifths of Chinaā€™s overall lending. Low-income countries are given grace periods and maturity extensions.

However, these loans, often doled out as part of Chinaā€™s Belt and Road Initiative, have been highly criticized for creating ā€œdebt trapsā€ for cash-strapped borrowers. Countries like Sri Lanka, Zambia and Ghana are currently in talks with Beijing to restructure their debt. But as more governments struggle to make payments amid a global downturn, thereā€™s growing concern about Chinaā€™s ability to refinance the loans and avoid financial problems at home if debtors canā€™t repay them.