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Rethinking strategies for resolving the Third World Debt crisis
African
Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD)
July 25, 2003
By Charles
Mutasa, Research & Policy Analyst
The worldwide
struggle for the cancellation of developing countries' debt by civil
society organizations has put the debt issue in a prominent position
on the international agenda. The resolution of the debt crisis is
still one of the major objectives of the international social movement,
especially African social movements. More than 25 million signatures
were attached to what the world considers to be the greatest petition
of the 21st Century mobilised by the Jubilee Movement around the
World, yet the debt is still with us. The million-dollar question
is what should the developing world and its starving masses do to
resolve the crisis?
There are many
facets to the debt crisis but the fundamental weakness is that the
Creditors, who constitute the donors, continue to dominate the decision
making process regarding how to resolve the Debt crisis. For many
years now, the Debt Relief Initiatives such as the Initiative for
Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) have been designed by donors
to safeguard their interests. This reflects a lack of global governance
to protect the interests of the weak debtor nations and their people.
Our global village is one in which the small and poor have their
say while the big and rich have their way. A democratic or rights-based
framework for resolution of the current debt crisis is therefore
necessary.
It is important to note from the outset that the debt problem is
inextricably tied to other factors (political, economic and social)
prevailing in both creditor and debtor countries. These factors,
more than the absence of a dispute settlement system, are mainly
responsible for the current level of Southern debt. The other contributory
factor to the persistence and magnitude of the current Debt crisis
is the intransigence of some Northern creditors (states, international
financial institutions and commercial banks) in the face of calls
for debt cancellation or reduction. The need for a Fair and Transparent
Arbitration mechanism is therefore based on the absolute need to
resolve the power imbalance between the Creditors and Debtors.
A Power Imbalance
Mechanism
The unique problems of debt call for establishment of a special
court. Many arbitration institutions in the world do not restrict
their modes of settling disputes to one mode. They employ methods
and processes, which are appropriate for each particular dispute.
It would not be appropriate to enhance current mechanisms such as
the Paris Club by introducing arbitration panels to hear possible
disputes between Debtors and Creditors because such a club which
is in fact a cartel can still intimidate Debtors under the guise
of debt negotiation. The imbalance in bargaining power between the
Creditors and Debtors calls for the establishment of a neutral and
impartial arbitral institution.
It is desirable
that an International Treaty set up the proposed Court under the
auspices of the United Nations. Notwithstanding the UN weaknesses,
establishing the proposed Court under the auspices of the United
Nations would be the most logical step for obvious reasons. The
UN has historical memory of these processes. It has the resources
and legal mandate to enforce compliance on such crucial matters.
More importantly, the UN is well placed in terms of global governance
and safeguarding the interests of the marginalized people of this
world.
The Court could
be composed of not more than five arbitrators from both the Debtor
and Creditor sides with an independent arbitrator to ensure impartiality.
This kind of composition has been used in other arbitral tribunals.
However, such a court could also maintain a panel of arbitrators
from which parties can choose. It would have a secretariat to provide
the necessary organisational support. Existing facilities such as
courtrooms, library, and consultation rooms belonging to the Permanent
Court of Arbitration in The Hague could be accessed.
It is a common
feature of court and arbitral proceedings for parties to apply for
stay of proceedings pending disposal of arbitral proceedings. Under
this power, repayment of particular disputed loans could be frozen,
stayed or suspended until the Court makes a decision. This power
may be vested in the court by treaty and the Rules of the court.
The idea is to maintain the status quo until an action is disposed
of.
The rationale
for a special court on debt
Reasons for an arbitration court are varied and many if someone
considers not burying his head in the sand like an ostrich that
sees the storm coming. First, while the debtors have made undisputed
and legitimate claims and demands for debt cancellation, the creditors
on the other hand claim that debt cancellation is not the action
needed to resolve the problem. So the question of whether or not
there should be debt cancellation presents itself as a clear subject
of arbitration.
Secondly, the
African Ministers of Finance meeting in Addis Ababa in November
2000 as part of the Regional Meetings on Financing for Development
called for an independent body, that would not be unduly influenced
by the interest of the creditors, to examine the situation of HIPC
and other Debt stressed countries in respect to debt reduction,
conditionalities and other issues related to the Debt problem. The
Ministers called for the provision of a debt-servicing moratorium,
including accrued interest, in order to allow African countries
to find durable solutions to their debt problems.
Thirdly, The
Third United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries
(UN LDC-III) that was held in Brussels in May 2001 fully acknowledged
that the external Debt overhang of the majority of LDCs constitutes
an obstacle to their development efforts and growth. Debt service
takes up a large part of the scarce budgetary resources that could
be directed to productive and social areas. The same conference
acknowledged that the debt overhang harms the internal and external
investment climate and thus called for a viable mechanism to resolve
the impasse and usher these countries to the road map of development.
Fourthly, there
is need to reassign the responsibility for the Debt crisis and burden
partitioning where that might be necessary. There is a need for
Arbitration on specific types of Loans or debt in particular the
odious and illegitimate debts. Quite frankly, there are debts that
Developing countries ought not to repay because their people never
benefited from the loans. These include debts incurred by illegitimate
debtors and creditors acting illegitimately, loans misused through
corruption; debts incurred from illegitimate loans of projects that
did not benefit the people as was intended; debt incurred through
wrong policy advice such as adjustment policies or a result of external
factors over which debtors have no control. The list could extend
to include debt in which the money was actually stolen and banked
in the North and debts that cannot be serviced without causing harm
to people and communities. In a nutshell, it is a violation of human
rights to repay debt at the expense of meeting human development
needs.
Conclusion
There is a need for finding an appropriate instrument and institution
to deal with the special case of the debt problem. Existing instruments
such as the Permanent Court of Arbitration based in The Hague, the
United Nations Commission on Trade could either have its mandate
extended to include Debt issues or a new Commission specifically
for debt could be established. There is every reason to think of
a viable alternative after the Jubilee movement call for total unconditional
cancellation of debt failed to bring relief to the overburdened
and struggling economies. As one sage noted the Jubilee movement
mobilisation and collection of 25 million signatures to have the
debt cancelled in what could be considered the world's greatest
petition did not succeed possibly because creditors also go to church.
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