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IMF warns Nigeria and other emerging economies of “doom loop”

15% of low-income countries are already in debt distress – IMF

Kristalina Georgieva

The Washington based lender, International Monetary Fund, has raised concerns about a potential “doom loop” for Nigeria and other emerging economies.

This was disclosed in a recently released IMF report, titled “Emerging-Market Banks’ Government Debt Holdings Pose Financial Stability Risks”.

Nigeria’s bank credit to the government surged to N14.9 trillion as of February 2022, an uptick from the N14.2 recorded in January 2022.

As a result of the pandemic, emerging-market banks now hold unprecedented levels of government debt, raising the risk that public-sector financial pressures would jeopardize financial stability.

What the IMF is saying

IMF stated that there is a reason to worry about this nexus between banks and governments. “Large holdings of sovereign debt expose banks to losses if government finances come under pressure and the market value of government debt declines,” it stated.

The Bank stated that a crisis with the credit to the government could force banks, especially those with less capital “to curtail lending to companies and households, weighing on economic activity.“

The Bank added that “The sovereign-bank nexus could lead to a self-reinforcing adverse feedback loop that ultimately could force the government into default. There is a name for that, too—the “doom loop.” It happened in Russia in 1998 and in Argentina in 2001-02.”

The IMF also noted that rising returns in advanced countries as central banks start to normalize monetary policy might make emerging-market debt less attractive and put upward pressure on borrowing prices.

What could cause a doom loop

What you should know

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