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9/21/2022

Remarks by Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury Brent Neiman at the Peterson Institute for International Econo…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks by Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury Brent
Neiman at the Peterson Institute for International Economics
September 20, 2022

As Prepared for Delivery
Thank you, Adam, I appreciate the opportunity to speak here today. I last gave a talk at PIIE a
couple of years ago, while wearing my previous hat as an academic. One great thing that you
immediately notice about PIIEʼs experts and a iliates is that in addition to economic theory,
they care about the practical details, institutional and otherwise, that can constitute the
di erence between a successful or unsuccessful policy. Now, as a policymaker at Treasury, I
have a more visceral appreciation for this reality, including when it comes to cross-border
lending and to cross-border borrowing. I thought, therefore, this would be a great place to
discuss some practical ways to do both better.
Developing and emerging markets were in a very di icult spot at the start of the year. The
COVID-19 pandemic led to a 2 percent fall in their collective output in 2020, the first overall
contraction in the post-World War II period. Governments, appropriately, borrowed and spent
to weather the shock and fight back against the disease. Their debt levels jumped from 54
percent of GDP before Covid to 64 percent by the end of last year.
And then, at this time of great vulnerability, Russia unleashed its brutal and unjustified war
against Ukraine. The war has caused food and energy prices to jump and accelerated inflation
around the world. As advanced economy central banks have raised rates, cross-border
investment flows have retrenched. Net outflows across emerging markets in the first quarter
of 2022 were the largest since the global financial crisis. The dollar, in real terms, has
appreciated to levels not seen for several decades.
Together, these ingredients all but assure debt distress in a number of countries. Weʼve all
seen the recent images of social unrest in Sri Lanka. While the specter of a systemic sovereign
debt crisis has not materialized, the di icult global conditions are amplifying domestic
vulnerabilities, and economic stresses are appearing around the world. More, I fear, may come.

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In the short-run turmoil following some episodes of distress, we should be ready to quickly
deliver assistance, potentially taking steps such as repurposing existing international
programs to fill urgent needs. But what can be done to help a er that? And what can we do to
reduce the likelihood of these events in the first place?
Today, I would like to discuss the logic behind working together to resolve unsustainable
debts, why multilateral restructuring has in practice become more di icult, and how
roadblocks in that process prevent countries from being able to take advantage of the
international financial institutions that weʼve all worked so hard to build. Iʼll suggest some
concrete steps that creditors, borrowers, and the global community can take -- stopping
some practices and ramping up others -- to achieve better outcomes now and into the future.

1. DEALING W IT H OVERHANG
Let me start by noting that itʼs a good thing that developing countries and emerging markets
can borrow from abroad and we should continue to pursue policies that allow them to do so.
These countries have less capital per worker than advanced economies and so have many
investment opportunities o ering high economic and social returns. Given their incomes will
be higher in the future, it makes good sense for them to finance these opportunities with
foreign capital. Not to mention the additional benefits carried by cross-border investment,
such as positive technology transfers. These financial flows are also a good thing for the
United States, o ering our citizens and companies a chance to diversify risks, finance projects
complementary to domestic production, and more generally deepen cultural and commercial
ties.
Of course, macro shocks and other unpredictable developments can stress the sustainability
of this borrowing. For many countries, such stresses can be resolved by pursuing the
appropriate reforms, perhaps involving the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or others,
without any need to restructure. However, for countries with debt loads that significantly
exceed the value of what will likely be repaid – a condition referred to as debt overhang – we
have a now-standard playbook.
The first step is to reduce the countryʼs external debts to make sure the borrower doesnʼt
forgo useful projects. A er all, with debt overhang and no debt restructuring, some of the
return to future investments will go toward repaying the existing creditors, leading to
underinvestment.[1] It is in the countryʼs interests and also in the collective interest of the
creditors to avoid this outcome.
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Remarks by Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury Brent Neiman at the Peterson Institute for International Econo…

Given this alignment of interests, wonʼt the creditors on their own o er the e icient level of
relief? Unfortunately, no. Together, the creditors would benefit from restoring sustainability
and allowing the country to obtain new financing to pursue high-return activities. But
individually, each creditor would rather be repaid in full and let the others take losses. Further,
some creditors, focused on their own interest, may prefer deeper cuts to local spending than
what a global social planner would suggest. Much of the international financial architecture
developed over the past several decades aims to deal with these incentive and collective
action problems. The Paris Club, for example, was formed to coordinate debt restructuring
among bilateral o icial creditors. The London Club was formed to similarly organize
commercial bank creditors.
Once a borrower makes a good faith e ort to restructure its private debts and o icial
bilateral creditors provide “financing assurances” – promises that theyʼll su iciently
restructure what is owed to them -- we reach the second step, an agreed IMF program. The
IMF then provides lending -- coupled with conditionality and expertise -- to help the country
restore macroeconomic stability and catalyze fresh lending for high return investments and
growth.
I do not mean to make it sound so easy, nor to imply that these elements are su icient for a
good outcome. It is only natural that there may be imperfections when countries work with
the IMF to design and implement programs. And, of course, additional shocks and
uncertainties o en intervene. But having this playbook in place and ready to deploy has been
good for the world.
Will this playbook work if we see a new wave of debt crises among developing and emerging
market countries? Four major changes in the international lending landscape over the past
decade have strained its e icacy. First, the debt burdens of developing and emerging market
countries have risen considerably. Second, use of non-traditional arrangements, including
collateralized borrowing, has proliferated. Third, private sector creditors have grown in
importance. Fourth, while many o icial creditors have shi ed their focus toward o ering
grants, non-traditional o icial creditors have increased their lending to developing and
emerging markets. In particular, China has vastly expanded its portfolio of loans and trade
credits and is now by far the largest bilateral o icial creditor in the world. All these elements
have introduced new complexities to the needed coordination among creditors in debt
restructurings. My remarks will focus on some steps that creditors, borrowers, and
international financial institutions should take in response.
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Remarks by Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury Brent Neiman at the Peterson Institute for International Econo…

2. RECENT COMPLICAT IONS IN SOVEREIGN DEBT
REST RUCT URING
One important change in the creditor landscape stems from how China restructures its
bilateral debts. Chinese policy and commercial banks typically rely on limited cash flow
treatments and do not write down large losses. Researchers have found that the majority of
Chinese debt relief deals have come with significant delays and have not reduced the
borrower countryʼs nominal debt burden. Instead, the deals involved lengthening maturities or
grace periods, and in fewer cases, interest rate reduction or new financing. Only four cases
since 2000 have reportedly involved haircuts on Chinese o icial debt.[2] In some cases, such as
the Republic of Congo in 2018, debt restructurings have even increased the net present value
of Chinaʼs loans.[3] As a result, the restructurings typically do not resolve the debt overhang
and can stoke uncertainty about the need for repeated rescheduling.
Does the approach of any one country in this process matter all that much? In fact, Chinaʼs
enormous scale as a lender means its participation is essential. Estimates of the total stock
of outstanding Chinese o icial loans range widely from roughly $500 billion to $1 trillion,
concentrated in low and middle-income countries. China became the worldʼs largest o icial
creditor in 2017, surpassing the claims of the World Bank, IMF, and all Paris Club o icial
creditors combined.[4] A recent study estimates that as many as 44 countries now owe debt
equivalent to more than 10% of their GDP to Chinese lenders a er factoring in both on- and
o -balance sheet liabilities.[5] Failure to act on these debts could imply years of ongoing
di iculties with the servicing of debts and with underinvestment and lower growth in low and
middle income countries.
In November 2020, the G20 established the Common Framework to bring China and other nonParis Club creditors into a multilateral e ort to restructure the debts of low-income countries
on a case-by-case basis. This helpful instance of global economic cooperation carried the hope
that by bringing all creditors together, the Common Framework would result in needed debt
treatments in a timely and orderly manner. However, that ambition has not yet materialized.
There have been three Common Framework cases to date. In the case of Chad, China delayed
the formation of a creditor committee.[6] In the case of Ethiopia, China delayed the formation
of a creditor committee until it was clear that the IMF program would expire and discussions
on a debt treatment would not take place because of the conflict. China did join the creditor
committee for Zambia, but only a er six months of delays following the sta level agreement
with the IMF. Encouragingly, China announced in late July that it and the other o icial bilateral
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creditors would provide Zambia with debt treatments, and the IMF approved a three-year
lending program for Zambia on August 31. But even if, as I hope, the situations ultimately
improve in all three countries, these delays carry su ering and uncertainty, may discourage
others from requesting needed treatments, and preclude the best outcomes. Successful
e orts under the Common Framework have, alas, been uncommon.
Progress has also been slow on debt restructurings for middle-income countries outside of
the Common Framework. Furthermore, China has engaged in unconventional practices that
have allowed the IMF to move forward in several recent cases without obtaining standard
financing assurances. For example, in 2020, China agreed to $2.4 billion in new lending as a
financing assurance for Ecuadorʼs IMF program and to o set upcoming interest payments due
to Chinese creditors, even as private creditors agreed to a $17.4 billion debt restructuring.
However, rather than delivering the promised new financing in a matter of months, China only
came to terms with Ecuador this past week. In Suriname, China and India have so far failed to
provide financing assurances that the IMF considers specific and credible, leading to the IMFʼs
reliance on an unusual application of its policy to move forward with a program. In the case of
Argentina, China is not restructuring debt service, while Paris Club creditors are likely to do so,
and China has opted instead to promise net financing by o ering new loans.
In many of these cases, China is not the only creditor holding back quick and e ective
implementation of the typical playbook. But across the international lending landscape,
Chinaʼs lack of participation in coordinated debt relief is the most common and the most
consequential.

3. W HAT CAN CREDITORS, INCLUDING CHINA, DO?
The immediate priority for creditors is to conclude the pending Common Framework cases as
quickly as possible. We are also open to expanding the Common Framework to middle-income
countries and should prioritize discussions of ideas, including those o ered by new creditors,
to boost the speed and predictability of the process.
Creditors should also focus on making their lending more transparent, since a lack of clear
information on a borrowerʼs indebtedness makes lending to them riskier ex-ante and makes
resolutions more di icult ex-post. G7 countries have largely met their commitment to publish
their direct lending portfolios on a loan-by-loan basis, and at the U.S. Treasury, weʼve greatly
improved our online foreign credit reporting system. G20 creditors should also follow the
norms for financing terms and contractual clauses they endorsed in 2018.
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Remarks by Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury Brent Neiman at the Peterson Institute for International Econo…

A number of features common in Chinaʼs lending reduce transparency or di er from
international norms in ways that exacerbate the coordination problem in multilateral
restructurings. Chinese loan contracts o en contain non-disclosure agreements. As a result,
liabilities to China are systematically excluded from multilateral surveillance or restructuring
e orts. One study found that all contracts with Chinese state-owned entities a er 2014
contain strong confidentiality clauses that prevent the borrower from disclosing any terms
unless required to do so by law. Chinese loan contracts also commonly feature novel clauses
that allow Chinese lenders to cancel loans and demand immediate repayment in a wide
variety of circumstances. Collateral is included in up to half of all Chinese loan contracts, and
arrangements for repayment commonly involve escrow accounts.
All these elements limit a borrowerʼs ability to engage in standard multilateral restructuring
processes and incentivize the borrower to cut side deals on more generous terms with the
Chinese creditor. In fact, around three-fourths of all Chinese debt contracts contain clauses
that expressly commit the borrower to exclude Chinese debt from Paris Club restructurings or
from any comparable debt treatment.[7] Countries that seek a Paris Club debt restructuring
find themselves either having to violate the terms of their borrowing from China or to violate
the principle of comparability of treatment.
Additional problems may stem from institutional fragmentation within Chinaʼs internal lending
bureaucracy. In contrast to the typical practice among traditional o icial creditors, debt
distress appears to be managed by the specific Chinese creditor, rather than by the Ministry of
Finance (MOF) or an agency that is not the lender, like the Peopleʼs Bank of China.[8] But
Chinese policy banks and state-owned commercial banks do not report directly to the MOF or
to the PBOC. As a result, the MOF and PBOC have o en been unable to provide details on
behalf of the creditor banks on a debt treatment for the purpose of providing financing
assurances to the IMF. This institutional fragmentation can also keep Chinaʼs lenders from
coordinating on an assessment of borrowersʼ debt sustainability prior to extending loans.
Some of these institutional frictions may simply reflect the fact that China has grown so
rapidly as a creditor. And they are only natural given China is so new to the restructuring
process. That said, there are many ways China could quickly reduce these frictions.
In addition to improving its own tracking and transparency of all its foreign lending, China
might consider implementing di erent financial structures, such as the creation of a sovereign
asset management entity, or “bad bank,” as a way to allow the various creditor agencies to
isolate distressed loans. Specialized management expertise can then focus on restructuring
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while the development banks and other lending institutions are freed up to return to their
normal focus. With the right design features, such a structure might restore incentives toward
resolving, rather than holding out, on troubled debts. A useful parallel may be made with
reforms to the Chinese bankruptcy system. Amidst large increases in corporate debt and
bankruptcies, China reformed its corporate bankruptcy code in 2007 and introduced
specialized courts over the following decade. Research suggests these actions led to an
increase in the scale and speed of resolutions and boosted productivity in China.[9]
Changes in institutional structure or legal and management practices related to the
restructuring of Chinaʼs external debts as part of the multilateral process would not only
benefit low-income borrowers around the world but could also benefit China itself.
Private creditors could also do more to improve their own transparency. The OECD launched
the Debt Transparency Initiative in 2021 to operationalize the Voluntary Principles for Debt
Transparency that were helpfully put together by the Institute for International Finance (IIF),
but few have participated so far. As with many of these suggestions, by reducing risk,
information frictions, and coordination problems, such steps not only help borrowers but can
also benefit the creditors themselves.

4. W HAT CAN B ORROW ERS DO?
Borrowers can of course take their own steps to maximize the likelihood that, if they do end
up in debt distress, they can obtain relief and restore stability and growth, including with an
IMF program.
The antidote to non-disclosure by creditors is transparency by borrowers, and a number of
countries have made remarkable progress on this dimension. Benin strengthened its level of
debt disclosure by creating a debt portal and extending the coverage of its debt statistics.
Regular trainings and interactions with the World Bank and IMF have improved capacity. Along
with prudent macro-fiscal policies, Beninʼs reputation in markets strengthened su iciently
that it was able to issue international debt, even in the middle of the pandemic. Burkina Faso,
with the help of the Bank and Fund, last year issued its first Statistical Debt Bulletin that
meets international best practices and includes detailed information on loan terms and
conditions. It includes government direct debt, guarantees, and public-private partnership
contracts. Madagascar in 2014 adopted a Law on Public Debt and Guarantees that introduces
reporting requirements, including to their Parliament. As the sovereign debt expert Anna

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Gelpern has suggested, more countries should consider passing laws requiring their
governments to, in essence, make their public debt public.
With a clearer picture of their own consolidated external liabilities, borrowers could
implement measures that minimize the likelihood of individual ministries or state-owned
enterprises from contracting unsustainable debts. Many low-income countries already have
legal provisions that require authorization of all public sector borrowing by the central
government, and more should consider doing so. Some, including West African countries such
as Cote DʼIvoire and Gambia, have gone further by allowing their central government to
impose debt limits on all public entities.
Borrowers should also look around, evaluate which types of arrangements produce positive
long-term outcomes, and exercise caution when agreeing to unusual contract terms. If a
borrower country has an abundance of labor that is qualified to work on infrastructure, is
there a good reason to agree to only deploy foreign workers on financed projects requiring
standard construction skills? Is there a good reason for payments to be made via an o shore
escrow account that can be controlled by the creditor?
Borrowers might further enhance their sharing of information and best practices with
technical-level regional dialogues and conferences, including presentations by experts in
procurement, project audits, and debt management. For example, the Uruguay Chamber of
Construction recently held such a conference, promoting international best practices in public
contracting that brought together experts from across the world to share their experiences.
Government o icials, financial and legal experts, and construction and infrastructure firms
shared their perspectives on how, at each stage of the procurement life cycle, decisions
should not entirely reflect price, but also the quality and anticipated return of the projects and
the social benefit brought to the local community.

5. W HAT SHOULD MULT ILAT ERALS AND T HE REST OF T HE
W ORLD DO?
We should continue to support initiatives that foster sustainable lending practices and
transparency, like the G20ʼs guidelines or the OECDʼs and IIFʼs debt transparency initiative. We
should also continue to support initiatives that provide capacity building assistance to
developing countries, like the World Bank Debt Management Facility.
We should build on recent successes such as the adoption of enhanced collective action
clauses in bond contracts to minimize coordination problems and reduce disruption from
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holdout creditors. The G7 Private Sector Working Group (PSWG), led by the U.K., is making
helpful progress in developing templates for majority voting provisions that serve a similar
purpose in non-bonded debt.
We might also strive to create deeper markets for well-designed state-contingent securities,
which could reduce the need for debt restructurings in the first place. Borrowing countries
should issue whatever securities are best suited to their needs, but we should continue
e orts to brainstorm, create, and stress-test contract templates, whether the ideas come
from the private sector or from the o icial sector, such as the climate resilient debt
instruments currently worked on by the PSWG.
We must minimize the chances that the IMF provides financing that could ultimately be used
to repay select creditors. The IMFʼs and WBʼs debt sustainability analyses (DSA) constitute the
core of e orts to coordinate and overcome debt overhang, modeling quantitatively the
needed policies and, potentially, debt treatments. The expanding set of creditors and
complexity of lending approaches may have made it more di icult, but the IMF must remain
vigilant so that restructurings both meet the terms of the DSAs and are promised with
financing assurances that hit the IMFʼs standard of specific and credible, especially for
creditors without a robust track record of meeting this standard. Details about financing
assurances – their form, scale, provenance, etc. – should be more transparently reported and
tracked in sta reports. All o icial bilateral creditors must be treated equally in these
restructurings.
Finally, we should increase the scale of high-quality development financing, particularly
through the multilateral development banks, by stretching their existing resources and using
them to mobilize private capital. This would not only advance our development goals, but has
the added benefit of providing developing countries with a stronger set of alternatives when
considering loans with potentially onerous terms.

6. CONCLUSION
As I mentioned earlier, o icial bilateral creditors, led by China and France, agreed in late July
to o er debt treatment for Zambia. This is a great step, but it is only the first step, toward
finalizing technical details and actually delivering the relief. Now that the IMF program for
Zambia has been approved, it is vital that creditors move expeditiously to hash out, and then
transparently meet, the terms of the debt treatment.

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And Zambia is not the only pressing case. Sri Lanka urgently needs a debt restructuring and,
unfortunately, is not eligible for the Common Framework. On September 1, Sri Lanka reached a
sta -level agreement with the IMF on a robust set of policies to restore economic stability. In
order to bring this lending program forward, creditors now need to step up to negotiate a
debt treatment that is line with this economic program.
We are in new territory, but the coming weeks o er a real opportunity for progress.
Borrowers, lenders, and multilaterals all have a role to play. Swi ly concluding the first
Common Framework case, and making clear progress on multilateral restructuring outside of
the Framework, would be a big win not only for current and future debtors and their citizens,
but also for all o icial creditors, whether traditional ones or new ones. We must build on
recent experiences, apply lessons learned, and push ahead in these cases to prevent any
depreciation of our global financial infrastructure.
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[1] See Krugman, Paul, “Financing vs. Forgiving A Debt Overhang,” NBER Working Paper, 1988 and citations therein.
[2] Horn, Sebastian, Carmen Reinhart, Christoph Trebesch, “Hidden Defaults,” AEA Papers and Proceedings, May 2022.
[3] The Republic of Congoʼs total indebtedness to China increased by 26% in net present value terms a er the 2018 restructuring.
Gardner, Alysha, Joyce Lin, Scott Morris and Brad Parks, “Bargaining with Beijing: A Tale of Two Borrowers,” Center for Global
Development and AIDData, November 2020.
[4] Horn, Sebastian, Carmen Reinhart, Christoph Trebesch (2021), “Chinaʼs Overseas Lending.” Journal of International
Economics, Volume 133.
[5] Nearly 70% of Chinaʼs overseas lending is now directed to state-owned companies, state-owned banks, special purpose
vehicles, joint ventures, and private sector institutions, which are o en unreported but present balance sheet risks when risks
materializ e. Malik, A., Parks, B., Russell, B., Lin, J., Walsh, K., Solomon, K., Zhang, S., Elston, T., and S. Goodman. (2021).”
Banking on the Belt and Road: Insights from a new global dataset of 13,427 Chinese development projects.” Williamsburg, VA:
AidData at William & Mary.
[6] The Chad case remains delayed as creditors cannot agree to the terms of the memorandum of understanding.
[7] Gelpern, Horn, Morris, Parks, and Trebesch, “How China Lends.”
[8] In the case of the United States, credit renegotiation is managed by State and Treasury regardless of which agency provides
the credit. The budget costs of debt treatments are typically managed by Treasury.
[9] Li and Ponticelli, “Going Bankrupt in China." Review of Finance, 2022.
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