Present value of external debt (% of GNI) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Present value of debt is the sum of short-term external debt plus the discounted sum of total debt service payments due on public, publicly guaranteed, and private nonguaranteed long-term external debt over the life of existing loans. The GNI denominator is a three-year average.

Source: World Bank, International Debt Statistics.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Cabo Verde 108.32 2020
2 Angola 82.32 2020
3 Djibouti 70.00 2020
4 Mozambique 68.60 2020
5 Zambia 68.18 2020
6 Senegal 62.38 2020
7 Tunisia 61.60 2020
8 Mauritania 52.51 2020
9 Congo 52.33 2020
10 Gabon 47.58 2020
11 Lesotho 44.45 2020
12 Guinea-Bissau 44.24 2020
13 Rwanda 43.58 2020
14 São Tomé and Principe 41.43 2020
15 Liberia 38.72 2020
16 Morocco 37.16 2020
17 Sierra Leone 35.13 2020
18 Somalia 34.33 2020
19 The Gambia 33.56 2020
20 Kenya 33.22 2020
21 Chad 33.17 2020
22 Ghana 32.50 2020
23 Sudan 32.23 2020
24 Côte d'Ivoire 31.95 2020
25 Niger 31.16 2020
26 Mali 29.85 2020
27 Benin 29.05 2020
28 Madagascar 28.41 2020
29 Cameroon 27.56 2020
30 Uganda 27.04 2020
31 Egypt 26.28 2020
32 Guinea 25.10 2020
33 Togo 25.03 2020
34 Ethiopia 24.28 2020
35 Tanzania 24.23 2020
36 Central African Republic 23.22 2020
37 Burkina Faso 22.80 2020
38 Comoros 20.50 2020
39 Malawi 20.21 2020
40 South Africa 18.50 2020
41 Eswatini 17.47 2020
42 Burundi 15.38 2020
43 Mauritius 15.12 2020
44 Zimbabwe 12.61 2020
45 Dem. Rep. Congo 10.12 2020
46 Botswana 7.95 2020
47 Nigeria 7.44 2020
48 Algeria 0.77 2020

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Development Relevance: External debt is that part of the total debt in a country that is owed to creditors outside the country. The debtors can be the government, corporations or private households. The debt includes money owed to private commercial banks, other governments, or international financial institutions. External indebtedness affects a country's creditworthiness and investor perceptions. Nonreporting countries might have outstanding debt with the World Bank, other international financial institutions, or private creditors. Total debt service is contrasted with countries' ability to obtain foreign exchange through exports of goods, services, primary income, and workers' remittances. Debt ratios are used to assess the sustainability of a country's debt service obligations, but no absolute rules determine what values are too high. Empirical analysis of developing countries' experience and debt service performance shows that debt service difficulties become increasingly likely when the present value of debt reaches 200 percent of exports. Still, what constitutes a sustainable debt burden varies by country. Countries with fast-growing economies and exports are likely to be able to sustain higher debt levels. Various indicators determine a sustainable level of external debt, including: a) debt to GDP ratio b) foreign debt to exports ratio c) government debt to current fiscal revenue ratio d) share of foreign debt e) short-term debt f) concessional debt in the total debt stock

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Data on external debt are gathered through the World Bank's Debtor Reporting System (DRS). Long term debt data are compiled using the countries report on public and publicly guaranteed borrowing on a loan-by-loan basis and private non guaranteed borrowing on an aggregate basis. These data are supplemented by information from major multilateral banks and official lending agencies in major creditor countries. Short-term debt data are gathered from the Quarterly External Debt Statistics (QEDS) database, jointly developed by the World Bank and the IMF and from creditors through the reporting systems of the Bank for International Settlements. Debt data are reported in the currency of repayment and compiled and published in U.S. dollars. End-of-period exchange rates are used for the compilation of stock figures (amount of debt outstanding), and projected debt service and annual average exchange rates are used for the flows. Exchange rates are taken from the IMF's International Financial Statistics. Debt repayable in multiple currencies, goods, or services and debt with a provision for maintenance of the value of the currency of repayment are shown at book value.

Periodicity: Annual