October 24, 2025
 
 
 
 

Development Finance International

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16 October – Washington - DFI Participates in Technical Meeting on UNCTAD Borrowers’ Club

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DFI was invited to a technical meeting of experts, to advise on the technical preparations for the UNCTAD Borrowers’ Club, which was mandated in the Compromiso de Sevilla of the Financing for Development conference in July 2025. The meeting was held inthe sidelines of the IMF-World Bank meetings in Washington and followed a meeting of developing country ministers on 15 October which strongly endorsed the creation of a Borrowers’ Club. DFI has already been advising UNCTADs pilot phase of the Club for a year and presented suggestions arising from the positive lessons of the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries’ Finance Ministers’ Network (1998-2014) as well as the OIF Lower-Income Francophone Finance Ministers’ Network (2014-2020). The meeting made clear that the Club will be governed and led by ministers of the participating countries and is intended to reinforce country voice and capacity at ministerial and technical level, through ministerial meetings, inter-regional workshops and information exchange, and South-South capacity-building.

 
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Washington - Debt Service Watch 2025 Briefing and Database Released

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The latest DSW Briefing shows that in 2025, debt service is absorbing 45% of budget revenue and 35% of spending across the global South, even worse than in 2024 and the worst since records began. It exceeds total spending on education, health and social protection combined by 20%, and 5.2 billion of the world's citizens live in coutries where debt service exceeds social spending. There has been no progress on debt relief since last October, with current agreements leaving countries paying 76% of their revenue in debt service. Meanwhile, due to lack of debt relief and aid cuts, millions more children are out of school, and millions more people are dying of HIV/AIDS and hunger. The briefing makes four suggestions for ways forward: 1) setting a target of 10% debt service/revenue for all debt relief agreements; 2) cancelling debt service above this level in a 10-year "Jubilee holiday" for poorer countries; 3) taking more radical measures to reduce borrowing costs for wealthier countries; and 4) immediate 5-year debt service cancellation when countries are hit by natural disasters. It urges the South African G20 presidency to pursue genuine debt relief, ask like-minded creditors to cancel their debt service, and support a Borrowers' Club.

 
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19 April -Tackling Extreme Inequality at Its Epicentre – a Policy Agenda for Eastern and Southern Africa

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Following the 2024 Commitment to Reducing Inequality report, DFI has partnered with the African Council of Churches and a group of Scandinavian civil society organisations (Norwegian Church Aid, ACT Church of Sweden, and Felm), to produce a report analysing the extreme levels of inequality in Eastern and Southern Africa and defining a policy agenda to cut it dramatically.  

Eastern and Southern Africa is a global epicentre of extreme inequality, with two-thirds of its countries having very high income inequality, and even higher wealth inequality. Extreme inequality is increasing poverty and hunger, corroding politics, destroying citizen trust in governments, and sparking political unrest, fuelling division, and slowing growth.

The report finds that most of the governments in Eastern and Southern Africa are rowing backwards on policies to reduce inequality, so it will rise even higher in future. Since 2022, 80% of governments have cut spending on key anti-inequality social programmes; 50% have made their tax systems less progressive; and 90% have failed to apply minimum labour rights (especially for women) and allowed minimum wages to fall way behind high inflation. In addition, the region is now being hit by its worst ever debt crisis, austerity and aid cuts. Based on these findings, the report defines an urgent policy agenda for governments to accelerate their efforts to fight inequality, and for the international community to help them through comprehensive debt relief, an end to austerity and more concessional financing.

 
 
 
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1 November - 2024 Debt Service Watch Summary Database Released

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DFI has today released the 2024 summary database for Debt Service Watch, the findings of which have been reported in our recent G20 Debt Relief Briefing, our SIDS Debt Relief Proposal and our Debt and Education Briefing, as well as in the Guardian on 20 November. The key findings of the database are that debt service has risen sharply as a percentage of budget revenue across countries borrowing from the World Bank, from the 38% reported in October 2023 to 43%. This is partly because the database has been widened to cover 144 countries, up from 139 last year, but also reflects a further rise in debt service compared to all economic aggregates and social spending. Due to inaction by the G20 during 2024, the global debt crisis has continued to get even worse. You can find the summary database here.

 
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31 October - Fortaleza UNESCO Conference - The Debt Crisis Derailing SDG4

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The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4) aims to provide quality and equitable education to all by 2030. Progress has been slow and virtually nil post-COVID. As a result, only one in six countries is predicted to meet the goal. Post-COVID, gaps in education completion and learning outcomes between the global North and South are growing, and 84 million children may be out of school in 2030.

This briefing shows that a large and escalating debt crisis is already derailing SDG 4. Since 2015, the share of budgets devoted by governments to education has fallen from 14.4% to 13.7%, and only 13.1% in low- income countries. This is mainly because (as shown by the Debt Service Watch database) debt service is increasingly pushing aside other spending, absorbing an average of 42% of all government spending in 2024 (rising to 47% in 2025). Globally, debt servicing exceeds education budgets by 2.8 times. Among LICs and LMICs - who have the largest financing needs to meet SDG 4 – it is 2.9 and 3.1 times higher; and the same is true for the regions furthest behind on SDG4 – Africa (3.2 times) and Asia (2.9 times). In 16 countries, debt service is more than five times as high as education spending.

The UN Global Education Monitoring report has estimated that the financing gap for meeting SDG 4 (in LICs and LMICS) is US$100 billion a year during 2024-2030. DFI calculates that a debt relief package that brought down debt service to 10% of budget revenue for lower-income debt distressed countries (and reduced borrowing costs for countries which have to access global markets regularly to fund their budgets) could generate US$500 billion a year, or more than 4 times this education financing gap. There can be no recovery for SDG 4 without urgent action to tackle debt. To move forward, the education community must join others in calling for urgent and bold international action to sharply reduce debt service through enhanced debt relief, together with more concessional financing and enhanced budget revenue collection, to fund SDG4.

 
 
 
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