Friday, September 5, 2025
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Africa’s Silent Debt Crisis

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In Accra, Ghana, teachers protest delayed salaries. In Lusaka, Zambia, public hospitals operate without basic medicines. In Nairobi, Kenya, youth unemployment reaches new highs. A common thread connects these crises: unmanageable national debt.

Africa is once again caught in a debt trap—but this time, the chains are newer and quieter. Unlike the 1980s, when IMF bailouts dominated headlines, today’s crisis is hidden in Eurobonds, opaque infrastructure deals, and unregulated borrowing from private markets and non-Paris Club creditors like China.

A common thread connects these crises: unmanageable national debt.

Thirty-five African countries are now in or at high risk of debt distress. Ghana, Zambia, and Ethiopia have defaulted or restructured. Debt service now consumes more than 50% of government revenues in some countries. Meanwhile, essential services go underfunded.

The problem is compounded by a lack of transparency. Many deals are signed in secret. Collateralized assets—like ports and airports—can be seized if debts go unpaid. Citizens are rarely informed.

 

Efforts to resolve the crisis have faltered. The G20’s Common Framework for Debt Treatments has been slow and ineffective. Civil society groups are calling for a permanent global debt relief mechanism, emphasizing that without restructuring, development gains will be reversed.

Debt is not just an economic issue—it is a political one.

Debt is not just an economic issue—it is a political one. It shapes sovereignty, prioritization, and the very future of governance. Until there is a global reckoning with the new face of debt colonialism, Africa’s prosperity will remain mortgaged.