• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Monday, June 15, 2026
  • Login
Vital News
  • Frontpage
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • National
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • More
    • Crime
    • Judiciary
    • Security
No Result
View All Result
  • Frontpage
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • National
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • More
    • Crime
    • Judiciary
    • Security
No Result
View All Result
Vital News
No Result
View All Result
Home National Opinion

From Drain To Gain: 3 Reforms That Can Free Africa From Debt Bondage By Steve Aborisade

...A Borrowers’ Forum, automatic debt pauses during crises, and 1% of AI revenues — the urgent fixes Aborisade says can turn Africa’s debt burden into development

Vital News by Vital News
June 15, 2026
in Opinion
0
From Drain To Gain: 3 Reforms That Can Free Africa From Debt Bondage By Steve Aborisade
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

LFrom Drain To Gain: 3 Reforms That Can Free Africa from Debt Bondage

….A Borrowers’ Forum, automatic debt pauses during crises, and 1% of AI revenues — the urgent fixes Aborisade says can turn Africa’s debt burden into development

By Steve Aborisade

Approximately 3.4 billion people live in countries that spend more on debt repayments than on health or education.

In Africa, two in every three countries pay more in debt interest than they invest in the health of their citizens.

RelatedStories

Hijrah, The Islamic New Year : A Time For Reflection, Renewal and Hope By Abdulkarim Abdulmalik

From 55,000 TB A Year To 1.4 Million A Month : Nigeria’s Data Boom Is Overwhelming The System By Osita Odafi

Omodara : The ‘Pain In The Neck’ of Criminals, Pride Of Kogi Govt, No Nonsense Crime Fighter In the Eyes of Citizens By Abu Micheal

The Abiodun Effect : Infrastructure, Industry And Ogun’s Economic Transformation By Kayode Akinmade

The global debt system was not designed with the developing world in mind, and the cost of leaving it unreformed is one that the poorest populations continue to bear.

There is a number that should stop every country and every international creditor in their tracks.

Three trillion dollars. That is the approximate sum that poorer countries send back to wealthier ones every single year, through debt servicing and tax loopholes.

The Global South is not simply a recipient of global generosity, and by most honest measures, it is a net financier of global wealth.

The origins of this imbalance lie partly in history.

When colonised nations gained independence, they inherited economies shaped to serve external markets, built around the export of raw materials, fossil fuels, and cash crops to fuel industrial growth in the global north.

That left them with weakened domestic foundations and dependent on external financing to achieve real development – hospitals, roads, schools, and food systems.

Borrowing to close that gap was a rational and necessary response to an engineered deficit, not a sign of mismanagement.

The problem has always been the terms. Countries in the Global South pay between two and twelve times more in interest than wealthy nations, not because their governments are reckless, but because the system classifies them as less creditworthy and then uses that classification to justify the very conditions that make them so.

Between 1970 and 2023, governments across the Global South paid an estimated 2.2 trillion US dollars in interest to Western creditors alone.

Higher risk ratings lead to higher interest rates, which increase debt burdens, which worsen ratings further. The cycle sustains itself.

The international financial institutions that control global borrowing rules were created 80 years ago by wealthy nations. Very little has changed since.

Today, a small group of rich countries still holds more voting power in these institutions than the entire Global South combined, even though the Global South represents 85% of the world’s population.

That means the rules of borrowing, debt relief, and repayment are largely written by creditors, for creditors.

That is a system designed to keep our communities in debt forever, and it needs to change.

The rules of borrowing, debt relief, and repayment are therefore shaped overwhelmingly by creditor interests, with limited structural input from borrowing nations.

Private creditors have compounded this imbalance further.

Commercial banks, hedge funds, and bondholders, based overwhelmingly in wealthy economies, now hold more than half of the public external debt of many developing nations.

Unlike multilateral lenders, they operate under no binding obligation to participate in debt relief or restructuring.

The consequences are not abstract.

When a government in sub-Saharan Africa must spend more on servicing foreign debt than on the health of its citizens, children die of preventable diseases.

When debt conditionalities demand budget cuts as the price of relief, classrooms go unbuilt and teachers go unpaid.

The burden of those cuts falls disproportionately on women, children, and the most vulnerable populations.

For example, Sub-Saharan Africa bears the highest burden of maternal and infant mortality globally, according to UNICEF, accounting for about 70% of all global maternal deaths and featuring a maternal mortality ratio of roughly 454 to 545 deaths per 100,000 live births, with neonatal mortality rates peaking at 26 deaths per 1,000 live births.

A debt architecture that blinds itself from these human tragedies, has failed at the most basic level of public purpose.

Three reforms are both urgent and achievable.

The first is the establishment of a formal Borrowers’ Forum for developing nations, as proposed at the Seville Financing for Development summit and endorsed by the G20 under South Africa’s presidency.

Creditor coordination mechanisms, most notably the Paris Club, have existed for decades.

A parallel forum for sovereign borrowers would enable collective negotiation, shared technical expertise, and a stronger, more consistent voice in the terms of their borrowing.

Mr Steve Aborisade

Collective bargaining is rational, not radical, and the political commitment to build this forum is now the immediate priority.

The second is the mandatory inclusion of automatic debt service pauses in all sovereign borrowing agreements, including those with private creditors.

These pauses should be pre-agreed, triggered by defined thresholds such as declared public health emergencies or major climate disasters, and free of interest for their duration.

Every dollar remitted to a creditor during a crisis is a dollar unavailable for emergency response, vaccine procurement, or flood relief.

Making such pauses standard rather than exceptional requires no new institutions, only political will and updated contractual frameworks.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is driving a new wave of global wealth creation concentrated overwhelmingly in the richest countries and companies.

We are calling on governments and the world’s largest AI companies to commit 1% of AI revenues to fund debt relief, public health, education, and social protection.

This would represent a proportionate contribution from the new economy to the stability of the global system on which it depends.

The people most exposed to the disruption that AI will accelerate are frequently those in the very countries already constrained by unsustainable debt.

None of these proposals requires the cancellation of legitimate financial obligations.

They require a recalibration of the terms on which those obligations are structured and enforced, so that sovereign borrowing can serve its intended purpose : funding the development and welfare of populations, rather than undermining it.

Africa is not a continent of failed states and missed opportunities.

It is a continent of extraordinary human capital, vast natural resources, and immense entrepreneurial energy, systematically constrained by a global financial architecture that was not designed with its interests in mind.

Changing that architecture is a precondition for the stability, prosperity, and peace that the entire world claims to want.

The question is no longer whether the global debt system needs reform.

The evidence is overwhelming and the consensus is growing.

The question is whether the political will exists to act, and whether the voices of those most affected will be loud and sustained enough to make the cost of inaction impossible to ignore.

*Steve Aborisade is the Senior Advocacy and Marketing Manager, AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF-Nigeria).

*This piece is written as part of the Freedom from Debt campaign (June 2026 to January 2027), championed by the AHF Global Public Health Institute.*
(vitalnewsngr.com)

Tags: debtInfantmaternalReformsservice
Previous Post

Ogun APC Adopts Kudirat Abiodun Adegunwa-Balogun As Deputy Governorship Candidate

Next Post

NSCDC Arrests 21-year-old For Kidnapping, Murder Of Technician In Ilorin

Vital News

Vital News

RelatedStories

Hijrah, The Islamic New Year : A Time For Reflection, Renewal and Hope By Abdulkarim Abdulmalik
Opinion

Hijrah, The Islamic New Year : A Time For Reflection, Renewal and Hope By Abdulkarim Abdulmalik

June 14, 2026
From 55,000 TB A Year To 1.4 Million A Month : Nigeria’s Data Boom Is Overwhelming The System By Osita Odafi
ICT

From 55,000 TB A Year To 1.4 Million A Month : Nigeria’s Data Boom Is Overwhelming The System By Osita Odafi

June 13, 2026
Omodara : The ‘Pain In The Neck’ of Criminals, Pride Of Kogi Govt, No Nonsense Crime Fighter In the Eyes of Citizens By Abu Micheal
Opinion

Omodara : The ‘Pain In The Neck’ of Criminals, Pride Of Kogi Govt, No Nonsense Crime Fighter In the Eyes of Citizens By Abu Micheal

June 7, 2026
66 Hearty Cheers For Dapo Abiodun, The People’s Governor
Opinion

The Abiodun Effect : Infrastructure, Industry And Ogun’s Economic Transformation By Kayode Akinmade

June 1, 2026
President Tinubu, Osifo To Slug It Out As APC Adopts Direct Primary for 2027 Presidential Ticket
Opinion

Kogi West APC Senatorial Primary Election : Another June 12 In The making ?

May 29, 2026
Next Post
NSCDC Arrests 21-year-old For Kidnapping, Murder Of Technician In Ilorin

NSCDC Arrests 21-year-old For Kidnapping, Murder Of Technician In Ilorin

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow Us

Recommended

Protest : IPC Urges Journalists To Adopt Safety Measures

IPC Decries Attack On Journalists Covering #ENDBADGOVERNANCE# Protests

2 years ago
Kogi Guber : Tribunal Orders INEC To Allow, SDP, Ajaka Lawyers Access To BVAS, Other Election Materials

CTC Of Kano Gov’ship Judgement : NJC Vows To Punish Erring Judicial Officers

3 years ago
Health : HYPPADEC Will Prioritise Staff Fitness – MD

Health : HYPPADEC Will Prioritise Staff Fitness – MD

3 years ago
History As Nigeria Born Abigail Marshall Katung Is Inaugurated As Lord Mayor Of Leeds City Council

History As Nigeria Born Abigail Marshall Katung Is Inaugurated As Lord Mayor Of Leeds City Council

2 years ago

Instagram

    Please install/update and activate JNews Instagram plugin.

Categories

  • Agriculture/ Water/ Mineral
  • Aviation
  • Business
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Football
  • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Housing
  • ICT
  • Judiciary
  • Labour
  • Maritime/ Marine Transport
  • National
  • News
  • Oil & Gas
  • Opinion
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Power
  • Religion
  • Security
  • Sports
  • Tourism
  • Transport
  • Uncategorized

Topics

Abiodun Abuja APC arrest Bandits Bello Benue Buhari CBN cement Court Dangote death dies drugs Economy EFCC Election FG Hajj INEC Kano kidnap Kill Kogi Kwara Lagos NDLEA Niger Nigeria Ododo Ogun PDP Police Power refinery rescue road Security Senate students Tinubu troops US Women
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

NUJ Threatens Boycott Of Leke Abejide, NSCDC Activities Over Arrest, Detention Of Member

NDLEA Nabs Brazil-based Nigerian Businessman With 6.10kg Liquid Cocaine Concealed In Shirts, Towel

Insecurity : Abiodun Says Ogun Is On High Alert

2027 : Abiodun Says Deputy Governor Will Come From Ijebu-Ode, Promises 95% Of Ogun Votes For President Tinubu

WCAHealth, Taraba Govt Graduate 60 Youths As Sexual Reproductive Health Champions

Gov. Mbah Lauds DSS, Army, Others, Inspects Arms Cache Seized From ESN Terrorists

Trending

NSCDC Arrests 21-year-old For Kidnapping, Murder Of Technician In Ilorin
Crime

NSCDC Arrests 21-year-old For Kidnapping, Murder Of Technician In Ilorin

by Vital News
June 15, 2026
0

The Kwara State Command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) has arrested a 21-year-old...

From Drain To Gain: 3 Reforms That Can Free Africa From Debt Bondage By Steve Aborisade

From Drain To Gain: 3 Reforms That Can Free Africa From Debt Bondage By Steve Aborisade

June 15, 2026
Ogun APC Adopts Kudirat Abiodun Adegunwa-Balogun As Deputy Governorship Candidate

Ogun APC Adopts Kudirat Abiodun Adegunwa-Balogun As Deputy Governorship Candidate

June 14, 2026
NUJ Threatens Boycott Of Leke Abejide, NSCDC Activities Over Arrest, Detention Of Member

NUJ Threatens Boycott Of Leke Abejide, NSCDC Activities Over Arrest, Detention Of Member

June 14, 2026
NDLEA Nabs Brazil-based Nigerian Businessman With 6.10kg Liquid Cocaine Concealed In Shirts, Towel

NDLEA Nabs Brazil-based Nigerian Businessman With 6.10kg Liquid Cocaine Concealed In Shirts, Towel

June 14, 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
Vital News

Vital News is an online newspaper with a mission to uphold professional journalism by reporting and publishing only facts and figures-based news reports across Nigeria and beyond.

Recent News

  • NSCDC Arrests 21-year-old For Kidnapping, Murder Of Technician In Ilorin June 15, 2026
  • From Drain To Gain: 3 Reforms That Can Free Africa From Debt Bondage By Steve Aborisade June 15, 2026
  • Ogun APC Adopts Kudirat Abiodun Adegunwa-Balogun As Deputy Governorship Candidate June 14, 2026

Categories

  • Agriculture/ Water/ Mineral
  • Aviation
  • Business
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Football
  • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Housing
  • ICT
  • Judiciary
  • Labour
  • Maritime/ Marine Transport
  • National
  • News
  • Oil & Gas
  • Opinion
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Power
  • Religion
  • Security
  • Sports
  • Tourism
  • Transport
  • Uncategorized

© 2022 Vital News - . All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Frontpage
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • National
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • More
    • Crime
    • Judiciary
    • Security

© 2022 Vital News - Vital News by Vital News.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In