Skip to content

Overview

China Eximbank suspends debt service payments from Government of Ethiopia between January and June 2021 (Linked to Record ID#96146)

Commitment Year2021Country of ActivityEthiopiaDirect Recipient Country of IncorporationEthiopiaSectorAction Relating To DebtFlow TypeDebt rescheduling

Status

Project lifecycle

Implementation

Pipeline: PledgePipeline: CommitmentImplementationCompletion

Timeline

Key dates

Commitment date
Jan 1, 2021

Stakeholders

Organizations involved in projects and activities supported by financial and in-kind transfers from Chinese government and state-owned entities

Funding agencies

State-owned Policy Banks

  • Export-Import Bank of China (China Eximbank)

Receiving agencies

Government Agencies

  • Government of Ethiopia

Loan description

China Eximbank suspends debt service payments from Government of Ethiopia between January and June 2021 (Linked to Record ID#96146)

Interest typeFixed Interest Rate

Narrative

Full Description

Project narrative

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting that took place on April 15, 2020 and on November 13, 2020, the Chinese Government agreed to work with other G20 members to implement the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI). Then, in 2021, China Eximbank and the Government of Ethiopia signed a debt suspension agreement. Under the terms of the agreement, the lender agreed to suspend principal and interest payments due between January 1, 2021 and June 30, 2021 under one or more loan agreements. The total estimated suspension amount for January-June 2021 was $63,567,053.20 ($42,947,605.40 in principal payments and $20,618,292.70). However, at the time that the parties signed the debt suspension agreement, they both acknowledged that the total suspension amount would ultimately be determined at the end of the suspension period (since loan disbursements could be made during the suspension period and the lender agreed to suspend the payment of interest accrued on any disbursements during the suspension period). The lender and borrower agreed that the suspension of debt service would be undertaken on a net present value (NPV)-neutral basis. Therefore, the borrower agreed to pay interest accrued on the amount outstanding under the total suspension amount (‘Suspension Interest’) by paying the Suspension Interest on the amount outstanding under each loan agreement’s suspension amount at the same rate of interest set forth in the original loan agreement. The lender and the borrower agreed that the repayment of the suspension amount for each loan agreement would take place in equal, successive, and semi-annual installments during a 5-year repayment period after a 1-year grace period (starting from and including the repayment date/repayment date of principal and interest falling within the suspension period). Additionally, under the terms of the debt suspension agreement, the lender and the borrower agreed that ‘[t]he suspension interest on the amount outstanding under the Suspension Amount concerning each Loan Agreement shall be calculated on the basis of the actual number of days elapsed and a year of 360 days, from and including the Repayment Date/Repayment Date of Principal and Interest falling within the Suspension Period to the date of payment in full of the corresponding Suspension Amount, and shall be paid in arrears on each Interest Payment Date under the corresponding Loan Agreement.’ The borrower also agreed that (1) ‘it shall continue to perform all its obligations […] under the Loan Agreements as supplemented and amended by [the debt suspension agreement]’; (2) ‘it shall use the created fiscal space to increase social, health, or economic spending in response to the COVID-19 crisis […]’ and ‘work closely with the International Financial Institutions who are expected to put in place a monitoring system’; (3) ‘it shall disclose to the Lender all Public Sector Financial Commitments (as defined in the Government Finance Statistics Manual 2014 (GFSM2014)), respecting commercially sensitive information’; and (4) ‘it shall contract no new non-concessional debt during the Suspension Period, other than agreements under the DSSI’.

Staff comments

1. AidData assumes that the same basic terms and conditions that governed China Eximbank’s DSSI (debt suspension) agreement with other governments also applied to its DSSI agreement that it signed with the Government of Ethiopia. Illustrative DSSI agreements can be accessed via https://www.dropbox.com/s/huwa695j3w9hwig/DSSI%20Agreement%20for%20Kyrgyz%20Republic.pdf?dl=0 and https://www.dropbox.com/s/67n1oq44it27kvu/3.%20Debt%20Suspension%20Agreement%20for%20GCL%20Other%20Projects.pdf?dl=0 and https://www.dropbox.com/s/n69i598f0fg7s80/6.%20Debt%20Suspension%20Agreement%20for%20PBC%20C2.pdf?dl=0. 2. According to information that the Government of Ethiopia provided to the World Bank through the Debtor Reporting System (DRS), the total suspension amounts under the Government of Ethiopia’s DSSI agreements with China Eximbank were $51,183,303.80 ($31,203,686.70 in principal payments and $20,456,781.40 in interest payments) in 2020 and $63,567,053.20 ($42,947,605.40 in principal payments and $20,618,292.70 in interest payments) in 2021. See https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/shqo5w418nwvocuiibhn8/IDS-Principal-and-Interest-Amounts-Rescheduled-14-July-2024.xlsx?rlkey=6mka34nyg2qpwd7lvgfxz6x87&dl=0. It is consistent with amount disclosed in the Annual Public Sector Debt Portfolio Analysis for the Year 2020/21 published by Ethiopia’s Ministry of Finance (https://www.mofed.gov.et/media/filer_public/da/3f/da3f3cc8-5358-438b-91cc-b46cb2f3b104/1final_ethiopias_dpa_no_22_2021_1.pdf).