Foreign debt up to 22.3% of GDP

Colombia’s foreign debt in March rose in absolute terms as a percentage
of the country’s gross domestic product as the government and private
companies borrowed more abroad.

The central bank said total foreign debt as a percentage of GDP rose to 22.3% in March from 18.6% a year earlier.

In absolute terms, foreign debt owed by the government and private
companies was $46.82 billion, up from $45.18 billion a year earlier.

The Colombian economy grew 2.5% in 2008, according to the country’s
statistics department. In the first quarter of the year, the economy
contracted 0.6% on top of a contraction of 0.7% in the fourth quarter
of last year.

The government’s total foreign debt rose to $30.5 billion, or the
equivalent to 14.5% of GDP, up from $29.35 billion in March 2008, or
12.1% of GDP, following a $1 billion bond sale in January.

Cesar Tovar, head of research at local brokerage Nacional de
Valores, said the government’s debt will rise in the coming months
because of another $1 billion bond sale carried out in April, even
though the money collected from the April bond sale will be used to
finance the 2010 budget.

Besides the $1 billion in bonds, the government plans to borrow
$2.65 billion from multilateral lenders, such as the World Bank and the
Inter-American Development Bank this year to plug its widening 2009
budget deficit, which is expected to reach the equivalent of 2.4% of
gross domestic product.

Overseas debt held by Colombia’s private sector was also higher in
March, at $16.33 billion, or the equivalent to 7.8% of GDP, from $15.83
billion, or the equivalent to 6.5%, in the third month of last year.

The central bank said that a large chunk of the country’s foreign
debt, $42.03 billion, bore long-term maturity, while the remaining
$4.78 billion carries a short-term maturity. (Dow Jones)

Related posts

Colombia’s Senate agrees to begin decentralizing government

Colombia’s truckers agree to lift blockades after deal with government

Truckers shut down parts of Colombia over fuel price hikes