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China-Africa relations
ChinaDiplomacy

Why Ethiopia is taking its debt relief case directly to China, bypassing the G20

  • The African country is emerging from Covid-19 and two years of civil war
  • It applied for help under the Group of 20’s Common Framework but so far there’s been no progress

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Ethiopia has an estimated US$13.7 billion in debt to China, much of it advanced by China Exim Bank between 2000 and 2021. Photo: A.Savin/WikiCommons
Jevans Nyabiage
With no sign of progress in a G20-led debt-relief initiative, cash-strapped Ethiopia is turning directly to China for a way out of its loan problems.

Debt was reportedly one of the issues under discussion when Ethiopian Finance Minister Ahmed Shide led a high-level delegation to China late last month.

As well as meeting Chinese Finance Minister Liu Kun and Jin Zhongxia, from the People’s Bank of China, the delegation held talks with key Chinese financial institutions and creditors, including the China Export-Import Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) and China Development Bank (CDB).

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The trip came soon after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed visited Europe to raise funds for the reconstruction.

The trip included talks with Emmanuel Macron, the president of France, which co-chairs with China the Group of 20’s Common Framework creditor committee for Ethiopia.

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The framework is an initiative for restructuring government debt aimed at low-income countries and Ethiopia requested debt restructuring under the framework in early 2021.

But so far there has been no tangible result.

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