Journal Article
Debt Distress on China's Belt and Road
Authors
Publication Date
DOI
10.1257/pandp.20231004
JEL Classification
Key Words
Related Topics
International Finance
Financial Markets
Emerging Markets & Developing Countries
China
This paper shows that China’s lending boom to developing country sovereigns has largely ended and that debt distress and defaults are increasingly common. Chinese lenders react to this challenge through two main coping strategies. First, bilateral sovereign debt restructurings, typically with maturity extensions but no face value cuts and, second, rescue loans that allow debtors to avoid or delay default. Low-income countries tend to receive debt restructurings, whereas emerging market countries are more likely to receive rescue loans. We speculate that the differential crisis response is due to the different exposure levels of Chinese state banks.