Global public debt to hit US$100 trillion by end of 2024: IMF

    • Debt is tipped to increase in the US, Brazil, France, Italy, South Africa and the UK, according to the IMF report.
    • Debt is tipped to increase in the US, Brazil, France, Italy, South Africa and the UK, according to the IMF report. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Tue, Oct 15, 2024 · 01:01 PM

    GLOBAL public debt is set to reach US$100 trillion, or 93 per cent of global gross domestic product, by the end of this year, driven by the US and China, according to new analysis by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

    In its latest Fiscal Monitor – an overview of global public finance developments – the IMF said it expects debt to approach 100 per cent of GDP by 2030, and warned that governments will need to make tough decisions to stabilise borrowing.

    Debt is tipped to increase in the US, Brazil, France, Italy, South Africa and the UK, according to the IMF report, which urged governments to rein in debt.

    “Waiting is risky: Country experiences show that high debt can trigger adverse market reactions and constrains room for budgetary manoeuvre in the face of negative shocks,” it said.

    With little political appetite to cut spending amid pressures to fund cleaner energy, support ageing populations and bolster security, the “risks to the debt outlook are heavily tilted to the upside”, the IMF said.

    Countries where debt is not projected to stabilise make up over half of global debt and about two-thirds of global GDP.

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    Using a “debt-at-risk” framework, the IMF found that the level of future debt in an extreme adverse scenario could reach 115 per cent of GDP in three years, almost 20 percentage points higher than in the baseline projections.

    “This is because high debt levels today amplify the effects of weaker growth or tighter financial conditions, and higher spreads on future debt levels,” it said.

    The debt-at-risk metric for advanced economies has slipped from pandemic peaks and is now estimated at 134 per cent of GDP, but has risen to 88 per cent for emerging market and developing economies.

    While slowing inflation and falling interest rates are offering governments a window to get their fiscal houses in order, there is little sign of any urgency to do so, the IMF said.

    “Current fiscal adjustment plans fall far short of what is needed to ensure that debt is stabilised (or reduced) with high probability,” it said. BLOOMBERG

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