Tag: Debt

(Photo Credit: Andrew Parsons/10 Downing Street)
Posted in Europe

The English Summer…We Await

Prime Minister Boris Johnson delayed plans to lift the remaining covid-19 restrictions by a month last week with the infectious delta variant rapidly spreading throughout the country. Now, the full reopening of pubs and restaurants among other places will have to wait AGAIN. The British (and the rest of the world) are stuck speculating on whether and when London and the country will return to some sense of normalcy. Today, absent packed streets and offices both with locals and non-locals, the UK’s exit from the EU somehow feels like a permanent exit from the world’s ecosystem (at least for now)…

Continue Reading The English Summer…We Await
(Photo Credit: Getty Images)
Posted in Europe

The Summer Of The Vaccine

If governments cannot avoid stoking further worry and sidestep validating conspiracy theories while also showing empathy and concern for its citizens, then vaccine rollout, which clearly is an issue of both an individual’s perspective on the vaccine’s necessity and its safety, will remain in doubt and the economic fall-out will accordingly be palpable in some parts of Europe…

Continue Reading The Summer Of The Vaccine
(Photo Credit: Anadolu Agency)
Posted in Middle East / Asia

Higher Oil Prices Come At The Right Time for the Middle East…

Oil recently touched above $70 and continues to hover above $60 today. The uptick is a welcome breath of fresh air into the Middle East (financial) ecosystem. The new cash inflow is and will continue to allow the regional states to underwrite new financing in their banking sectors and evade the 2009-esque fallout as banks today effectively bridge finance regional corporates to 2022 (…or potentially 2023)…

Continue Reading Higher Oil Prices Come At The Right Time for the Middle East…
(Photo Credit REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes)
Posted in Europe

France, State Guaranteed Loans, (and Grants): Deferring the Bigger Problem

France’s discussion on the transformation of state loans to grants signifies a greater problem for European economies. Many governments underwrote their economies with increased liquidity either through loans or deferment of debt. But the wall of insolvency cannot be avoided…

Continue Reading France, State Guaranteed Loans, (and Grants): Deferring the Bigger Problem
(Photo Credit: ATA Financial Research)
Posted in Europe

Italy, Covid-19, and Debt: A Concoction Cocktail for a (European) Financial Crisis

As the second wave of cases hits Europe, including Italy, there is not much convincing required on the seriousness of the virus. The same cannot be said about the growing challenges in the Italian economy. Debt is flowing into an economy that already has its share of bad loans in the financial ecosystem but there is little concern. It is the covid-19 pandemic thus why worry about a European financial crisis, right?

Continue Reading Italy, Covid-19, and Debt: A Concoction Cocktail for a (European) Financial Crisis
(Photo Credit: REUTERS / Agustin Marcarian)
Posted in Latin America

Argentina: Nothing is Certain but Death and Taxes

Argentines are struggling with covid-19 and a three-year recession. The government currently completed a $65 billion restructuring and now wants to tax its way out of a recession…

Continue Reading Argentina: Nothing is Certain but Death and Taxes
(Photo Credit: Image sourced from www.shutterstock.com)
Posted in Middle East / Asia

Middle East Sovereign Debt Levels Are Rising, But So What?

Middle East sovereign debt levels are rising, but so what? The question of whether the debt levels are sustainable is hard to answer…

Continue Reading Middle East Sovereign Debt Levels Are Rising, But So What?
(Photo Credit: REUTERS/Francis Kokoroko)
Posted in Africa

Ghana: Debt repayments greater than health or education spending

Ghana was the first sub-Saharan African country to ease restrictions when it lifted lockdown measures on 20 April. The country’s Minister of Finance Ken Ofori-Atta argued the 21-day lockdown of Ghana’s biggest cities had become financially unbearable for most of the population, a concern that gave the government little choice but to lift the restriction…

Continue Reading Ghana: Debt repayments greater than health or education spending
(Photo Credit: REUTERS/Karim Sahib)
Posted in Africa

South Africa’s taxman goes global

South Africa has long faced the reality of ‘flight’ by citizens to other countries for a myriad of reasons, including lack of economic opportunity and the prevalence of crime…

Continue Reading South Africa’s taxman goes global