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Did you
know?
- The amount of money
that is owed by African countries to Britain is roughly equal to
the amount of money that everyone in Britain spends each year on
chocolate.
- Despite all the money
that the poor countries are paying to the rich countries and the
IMF each year, the debts of the poor countries are actually growing
rather than reducing. This is because interest keeps being added to
the loans.
- Some countries have
actually paid back the money they originally borrowed several times
over - yet are still in debt.
- In 1994 the rich
countries gave about £34 billion in aid to the poor countries
– but the poor countries paid over £126 billion (ie four
times as much as they received in aid) to the rich countries in
debt repayments. (Think of this another way; have you ever worn a
red nose or done something else for Comic Relief? The amount of
money that Comic Relief raises in one day - 24 hours - to fund
poverty reduction programmes in Africa flows back in just six hours
in debt repayment. That doesn’t mean you should stop raising
money, without it the problem would be far worse, but debt
cancellation is a more powerful way of fighting poverty than
aid.)
- After Hurricane Mitch
caused huge destruction in Central America, many countries agreed
to give aid to help rebuild the damaged houses, hospitals and
schools. About £120 million of the aid money given was instead
used to repay debts to the IMF.
- If the debts that are
owed by the Philippines were repaid at a rate of £55,000 a
day, it would take 1307 years for the debts to be
repaid.
- In 1979, 99 per cent
of children in Tanzania went to primary school. By 1990 this figure
had fallen to 63 per cent, largely because of cuts in education
spending by the Tanzanian government as a result of the debt
problem.
- Because of disease,
life
expectancy in Zambia is dropping below 40 years. During 2001,
Zambia will have to spend £121 million on debt repayments
– money that could be spent on health care, medicines and
hospitals.
- In Uganda in 1995,
£1.60 per person was spent on health care, but £19 was
spent on debt repayments.
- During the famines
that have taken place in Ethiopia in recent years it has been
possible to buy food produced in Ethiopia in shops in Britain
– because food is grown for export rather than for local
people. (Earnings from these exports are then used to repay
debts.)
- Britain has owed the
United States nearly £9 billion since the end of the first
world war, that was borrowed to pay for aeroplanes, ships and
weapons.
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