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China may be prepared to join Zambia debt deal: US treasury secretary Yellen

  • The potential multilateral deal is seen as a crucial test case for efforts to help developing countries find relief from sometimes crushing external debt
  • Janet Yellen met her Chinese counterpart, Liu He, in Zurich on Wednesday. On Friday she said China’s response to Zambia’s situation had been ‘constructive’

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US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen stands in the “Door Of No Return” on Goree Island, Senegal on Saturday. Photo: AP

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen again expressed cautious optimism that China will be willing to enter into a multilateral debt restructuring deal with Zambia.

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The potential agreement is seen as a crucial test case for efforts to help developing countries find relief from sometimes crushing external debt.

“Our counterparts are sophisticated economics officials who can listen to a reasoned argument and understand it,” Yellen told reporters in Dakar, Senegal, on Saturday. “I definitely think they get what the problem is, and that there needs to be a solution.”

China’s Vice-Premier Liu He addresses the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Tuesday. Photo: Reuters
China’s Vice-Premier Liu He addresses the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Tuesday. Photo: Reuters

The Treasury chief met her Chinese counterpart, Liu He, during a brief stop in Zurich on Wednesday before heading to Africa for a 10-day, three-country visit. Yellen raised the case of Zambia during that meeting, and on Friday said China’s response had been “constructive,” without offering more details.

She also shed some light on Saturday on why China has appeared to drag its feet for months on agreeing, along with other lenders, to a restructuring deal with Zambia.

“They have issues about why multilateral development banks don’t have to take a haircut, and that needs to be worked through,” Yellen said. “But we have counterparts who we are able to talk to in a reasonable way, and work through our differences, and I hope out of that process that some progress will come.”

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She quickly added that she had no prediction about what might happen next in the talks, or when.

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