You are here: Home Resources Issues Debt
Document Actions

Debt Cancellation

by admin last modified 2007-10-09 22:11

 

 

Debt 468

GCAP’s position on debt is clear – it should be cancelled non-selectively and unconditionally. The non-selectivity principle is a particularly important one. Indeed, the criteria for deciding that Uganda and not Kenya gets debt relief are entirely arbitrary and illogical. Given the paltry nature of the debt relief offered at the G8 – it leaves Africa with over $200bn of debt and annual repayment obligations far exceeding the scale of the debt relief – we cannot afford to take our eyes off the debt ball. The issue of debt is not so much what we demand but whom we address with what messages. 

 

We call on donor governments and Institutions to:

  • Immediately and without externally imposed conditions cancel the odious, illegitimate and unpayable debt of poor and middle income countries through a fair, democratic and transparent process to free up resources for human development. Where debt cancellation measures are inadequate or failing to enable poor countries to reach the MDGs and provide basic social services, we support collective developing country strategies for the repudiation of all odious and illegitimate debts.
  • Reverse the flight of capital from poor countries and identify and repatriate stolen assets by taking action against tax havens, financial institutions, multinationals and others facilitating this resource leakage.
  • Establish a fair and just world order in which International Financial Institutions (especially the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and World Trade Organisation) operate within the broad principles enshrined under UN commitments and human rights obligations to better regulate the world economy.

Some documents

  1. How ECAs turn private risks of corporations into debt for developing countries, Export Credit DEBT briefing paper,
  2. Bolivia case study: Monitoring of the Bolivian poverty Reduction Strategy (EBRP) and the HIPC initiative and their impact on the health sector – Summary
  3. Bolivia case study: Monitoring of the Bolivian poverty Reduction Strategy (EBRP) and the HIPC initiative and their impact on the health sector – Full text
  4. Philippines - Towards Financing the Millennium Development Goals of the Philippines
  5. Philippines - Possibilities of Debt Reduction for MDG Financing, Presentation
  6. The Asian Peoples’ Tribunal on Poverty and Debt - English

More links

 

Did You Know......
  • Over 1 billion people live on less than $1 a day with nearly half the world’s population (2.8 billion) living on less than $2 a day.
  • Between 1990–92 and 2001–03, the number of hungry people in Brazil decreased from 18.5 million to 14.4 million and the prevalence from 12 to 8 percent of the population.
  • In 1988 there were some 350 000 polio cases worldwide; by January 2005 there were only 1185 cases reported.
  • UNESCO say in the 2007 Global Monitoring Report, that Universal primary education would cost $11 billion a year … that's half what Americans spend on ice cream.
  • Globally, as of 2005, an estimated 15.2 million children under 18 have lost one or both parents to AIDS; about 80 per cent of these children live in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • International trade is worth $10 million a minute. 70% of this is controlled by multinational corporations.

More ...

 

Powered by Plone CMS, the Open Source Content Management System

This site conforms to the following standards: