Color LogoLoading...

🌍 Feed

✍🏿 Compose

Commodity-linked bonds and Africa’s search for innovative financing

#finance
#loans
#commodities
#finance
#economy and policy
Africa needs about $1.3 trillion a year to achieve the goals of the 2030 Agenda of Sustainable Development. These needs include, for example, about $93 billion to $170 billion per year in investments for the promotion of adequate infrastructure, which doesn’t include the financing necessary for addressing the increasingly devastating impacts of climate change.

Africa needs about $1.3 trillion a year to achieve the goals of the 2030 Agenda of Sustainable Development. These needs include, for example, about $93 billion to $170 billion per year in investments for the promotion of adequate infrastructure, which doesn’t include the financing necessary for addressing the increasingly devastating impacts of climate change. Still, despite efforts to improve upon the mobilization of domestic revenues, Africa faces a huge financing gap to support its development agenda.
Moreover, the devastation caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted now, more than ever, the need for an adequate, predictable, sustainable, and integrated financing mechanism to build back better. However, Africa does not have the fiscal space as debt levels of countries have risen to unsustainable levels following the pandemic as countries had to borrow more to address mitigating measures against the virus. Indeed, many experts are recommending that countries in debt distress restructure their debt. However, given the uncertainty and economic costs associated with debt restructuring, African countries could search for alternative resource mobilization strategies.

STATE-CONTINGENT DEBT INSTRUMENTS

Most African countries—because they are major exporters of raw commodities and have limited capacities to effectively mitigate the risks when commodity prices plummet and there are sharp increases in interest rates—are vulnerable to major financial risks linked to commodity price risks. Such conditions lead countries carrying large debts to face the challenges of increased indebtedness and debt servicing difficulties. These difficulties also lead to the deterioration of the balance of payments of the countries as export revenues fall and, consequently, the depreciation of the value of their currencies. Forms of financing that have been in the financial markets of industrial countries and offer considerable potential for risk management for African countries are state-contingent debt instruments (SCDIs), which could facilitate speedier and less-costly debt restructuring as the payments of restructured debt contracts could be linked to future outcomes. SCDIs are contractual debt instruments where payments are linked to a predefined state variable such as GDP, exports, or commodity prices.

COMMODITY-LINKED BONDS

In particular, commodity-linked bonds (CLBs)—a type of SCDI—present a significant vehicle that Africa could use to mobilize resources for its development given the vast mineral deposits on the continent. There are a number of positive economic implications for Africa regarding the issuance CLBs.First, CLBs could potentially stabilize the debt of a country. A country’s debt-to-GDP ratio is impacted by two fundamental shocks: i) government spending shocks, emanating from shocks to the structural primary balance and interest payments; and ii) growth shocks, which come from GDP growth. Given that CLBs compensate creditors with returns that vary with the debtor country’s nominal value of commodities, and by extension nominal GDP, CLBs can reduce the risks faced by a country from growth shocks. Hence, commodity-linked bonds provide a form of recession insurance to the issuer-country and reduce the risk that growth shocks will push a sovereign into default.Second, CLBs, compared with conventional debt, can increase a country’s capacity to maintain higher debt levels without coming under market pressure. This is because a country’s probability of default increases with the rise in the level of debt or need for debt restructuring and consequently the yield demanded by creditors to hold sovereign debt rises. The size of this credit spread will depend on the size of potential shocks to the debt-to-GDP ratio. In other words, the spread will depend on the probability that the shock could push the country into default. Furthermore, the debt-to-GDP ratio is much less volatile for countries with commodity-linked bonds than conventional debt. Therefore, at any given debt level, the probability that a sovereign will breach its debt limit is lower for commodity-linked bonds than that for conventional bonds, implying a lower credit spread at any given debt level. Hence, commodity-linked bonds have the effect of raising the debt ceiling and providing fiscal space for policymakers.
Friday, October 8, 2021Hippolyte FofackThird, African countries could, through the issuance of bonds linked to their main export, hedge against fluctuations in their export earnings. Notably, the debt crises faced by the African countries in the past were due to falling export revenues coupled with the simultaneous rise in world interest rates and debt-service payments. If African countries’ debt had been issued in the form of CLBs, then their debt-service payments would have declined along with export prices (or export revenues), thus lightening their debt load.Fourth, by issuing CLBs, African governments that need investment funds could share the appreciating market value of underlying commodities with bondholders in return for a lower coupon rate. CLBs offer an opportunity for African commodity-producing issuers and international commodity organizations to borrow at below-market interest rates. Through this process, countries could place themselves in an advantageous position by being linked to international markets, such as the U.S. commodity markets and eurobond markets.In conclusion, the issuing of commodity-linked bonds would provide an opportunity for commodity-producing African countries to tie their borrowing needs to an endowed resource. By issuing bonds indexed to their main export commodity, African countries could hedge against fluctuations in their export earnings and at the same time lessen the probability of defaulting on their external debt obligation.For more on this issue, see my paper, “Commodity-linked bonds as an innovative financing instrument for African countries to build back better.”

By Joseph Atta-Mensah Principal Policy Adviser, Macroeconomics and Governance Division - United Nations Economic Commission for Africa

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS:
The author thanks Kasirim Nwuke for encouraging him to prepare this note. The views expressed in the note are the author’s only, and should not be attributed to either the United Nations nor the Brookings Institution.

Top comments(0)

SEND

You may like this too...

Bird Story Agency

Despite a dip in overall funding levels, the continent is witnessing a marked increase in the number of ventures securing $1 million or more.
Apr 10, 2024

Bird Story Agency

Mozambique doubles down on growth with Africa's first dual benchmark rate cuts in 2024 as currencies across the continent score gains against the greenback.
Apr 5, 2024

Bird Story Agency

From ranking as the world’s worst-performing currencies in 2023, the Kenyan shilling and Nigerian naira have made significant progress. They are now among the best-performing currencies in the world for 2024, raising hopes for a lower cost of living in these countries.
Apr 2, 2024

Benjamindada

Explore how Leatherback's collaboration with YES BANK is revolutionizing remittances by enabling seamless Indian Rupee transfers worldwide, fostering economic growth and cultural exchange between India and Africa.
Mar 26, 2024

TechCabal

Access Bank's acquisition of National Bank of Kenya (NBK) marks a significant move in its East Africa expansion strategy, valued at around $100 million, pending regulatory approval. 📈💰
Mar 21, 2024

TechCabal

Nigeria's Access Bank strengthens its presence in Kenya with the acquisition of the National Bank of Kenya from KCB Group, marking its second Kenyan acquisition in recent years. 🌍💼
Mar 20, 2024

TechCabal

Nigeria's Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) proposes a substantial increase in the minimum paid-up capital for virtual asset service providers (VASPs) to ₦1 billion, aiming to reshape the crypto landscape.
Mar 18, 2024

TechCabal

Chipper Cash, a prominent fintech company, announces layoffs and salary cuts after suspending its services in the US, highlighting a strategic shift towards focusing on its African markets.
Mar 16, 2024

TechCabal

Despite economic challenges fueled by hyperinflation and sanctions, Zimbabwean startups are resilient and forging ahead. Learn how they navigate funding constraints, access markets beyond borders, and embrace alternative financial technologies.
Mar 15, 2024

Bird Story Agency

Nongcebo Langa fell in love with wine after a chance encounter with a winemaker at a fair. She went on to study the craft at South Africa’s renowned Stellenbosch University and her passion and mastery of the industry’s technical processes has resulted in her creating award-winning wines, like the 2022 Delheim Gewürztraminer.
Mar 12, 2024
Home
Business Hub
Market Hub
You
By signing up you agree to ourTerms|About us|Market Hub|Business Hub|Deals Hub