2026-03-10 1530-1600

Debt and Wealth Inequality
Thinking Allowed

What does an 18-month study of residents on a housing estate in southern England tell us about living with debt? Laurie Taylor talks to Ryan Davey from Cardiff University about his new book The Personal Life of Debt - Coercion, Subjectivity and Inequality in Britain, which tries to understand how debt affects people emotionally as well as economically.

Laurie is also joined by Sarah Kerr (LSE International Inequalities Institute), whose book, Wealth, Poverty and Enduring Inequality - Let’s Talk Wealtherty, investigates the stubborn persistence of inequality in the UK. Kerr argues that the gap between top and bottom earners has become entrenched and normalised across generations.

Producer: Natalia Fernandez

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28 minutes


On radio

Sunday
06:05
BBC Radio 4

#BBCRadio4 #BBCThinkingAllowed #LaurieTaylor #Sociology #CostOfLivingCrisis #Debt #Loans #LoanSharks #Bureacracy

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002sfvg

BBC Radio 4 - Thinking Allowed, Debt and Wealth Inequality

Living with debt - and has inequality become ingrained? Laurie Taylor hears new research.

BBC

Fortunately, #PaydayLoans are de-facto #illegal in #Germany because they not only violate expectable terms and conditions but essentially are what's called "#Sachwucher" or "effective extortive terms" and require a desperate, "inexperienced or otherwise not able to consent informed" individual, which makes said deals #exploitative and thus a felony, because #ConsumerProtection is something that exists in the #EU in general!

#USpol #Finance #PaydayLoan #LoanSharks #Billionaires #AndressenHorrowitz #LarryEllison #Enshittification #WorkingPoor #AntisocialSystem #Employment #Precariat #Insecurity #USA #US

Billionaires Found a New Way to Steal Your Paycheck

YouTube
Campaign warns people of risks from illegal money lenders

A campaign is warning people across Staffordshire of the risks of turning to illegal money lenders.

Lichfield Live

This article does mention #Mining! Not surprising!

Promises and Pitfalls: #China’s Financing of the #AtewaBauxite #Mining Project in #Ghana

Author: Angela Benefo & Michael Addaney
Date Published: July 11, 2021

"The #AtewaForestReserve in Ghana is a possible site for the development of an integrated #BauxiteAluminum mine through a Chinese resource-backed loan. Despite the opportunities for infrastructure development presented by the loan, this project carries significant risks. This article draws attention to #environmental sustainability challenges and the #DebtTrap conundrum associated with the proposed arrangement.

"President Xi Jinping has touted China’s recently unveiled Five-Year Plan as his country’s pursuit of ‘ecological civilization,’ a vision of promoting environmental sustainability and enhanced human-ecological interactions within and beyond China. However, China’s ability to promote ecological civilization in developing countries in line with this Plan will be challenging due to China’s generally poor environmental protection record in such contexts. For instance, while China claims it is prioritizing environmental sustainability in Africa, the #extractive projects initiated by its private sector do not align with this stated goal. These projects serve China’s broader interests and often create environmental consequences and problematic debt, therefore requiring a more careful analysis. A Chinese-backed bauxite-aluminum mine planned for a forest reserve in Ghana highlights the debt-trap concerns and environmental sustainability challenges created by some Chinese investments.

The Challenges of #ChineseLoans across #Africa

"China continues to play an enormous role in financing massive infrastructure projects in Africa. As the world’s largest official #creditor, China and its subsidiaries have invested billions of dollars across Africa’s energy, transportation, and mining sectors. Despite China’s indispensable contributions to infrastructure development in sub-Saharan Africa, there are valid concerns over how African countries will repay these massive debts to China.

"Compared to other official lenders such as the International Monetary Fund (#IMF) and the #WorldBank, Chinese loans are less challenging to acquire. For instance, the IMF monitors the amount of debt held by a country and will not provide more loans until a country seeks debt relief. Chinese lenders have more lenient terms and allow low-income African countries to borrow large amounts without much accountability—issuing loans which may be considered too risky by the IMF and other international lenders.

"Historically, China has entered into strategic agreements with developing countries to finance development projects while collateralizing the country’s natural resources. The growing demand for external finance for important infrastructure projects—some of which are overly ambitious and unsustainable—poses great risks to African economies, which risk losing their collateral and the possibility of debt distress.

"Chinese loans are often characterized by lack of transparency. Chinese financiers set tough conditions for financing large infrastructure projects, taking advantage of vulnerable African leaders desperate to complete ambitious developmental projects. For instance, the construction of a $10 billion port project in #Tanzania was suspended after careful consideration of the terms and conditions of the Chinese loan. The project, which the former president John Magufuli called 'exploitative and awkward,' would have rented the port to the Chinese government for ninety-nine years as repayment.

"In Ghana, Chinese financing over the past two decades has spanned various sectors including power, information communication technology (#ICT), #transportation, and #agriculture. Chinese foreign direct investment is estimated to be three times the size of EU countries’ investment in Ghana. Some of these loans are backed by resources such as #cocoa and #oil. For instance, #Sinohydro has allegedly agreed to deliver $2 billion worth of infrastructure projects across the country, which Ghana would pay back with proceeds from the sale of refined bauxite. An estimated $646 million of the initial $2 billion loan have been approved for disbursement. The Ghanaian government also signed a loan commitment of $550 million in 2019. Entering these types of agreements with China demands careful consideration by the Ghanaian government."

Read more:
https://gjia.georgetown.edu/2021/07/11/promises-and-pitfalls-chinas-financing-of-the-atewa-bauxite-mining-project-in-ghana/

#LoanSharks #AfricanNations #DebtColonialism #Colonialism

Promises and Pitfalls: China’s Financing of the Atewa Bauxite Mining Project in Ghana - Georgetown Journal of International Affairs

Georgetown Journal of International Affairs

Here we go... There's always a dark side when there's money involved... And when loans come due!

Dangers and Opportunities as #China’s #Loans to #Africa Come Due

Timothy Ditter | Monday, March 18, 2024

"Many African economies are facing a period of serious #economic distress with a very different character from the debt crisis of the 1980s and 1990s. This time, the People’s Republic of China (#PRC) is a major player, and a dramatic decline in PRC lending has compounded economic shocks in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine—just as the continent tries to recover from the pandemic. From 2001 to 2022, PRC financial institutions provided more than $170 billion in credit, loans, and grants to #AfricanNations, primarily to fund infrastructure projects tied to the PRC’s Belt and Road Initiative. But new PRC loans to African governments plummeted from $28.4 billion in 2016 to less than $2 billion in 2020 and have continued to decline.

"African governments are awakening to the fact that opaque PRC lending practices and problematic #LoanTerms have rendered already fragile economies at an increased risk of default. However, this moment of peril also provides an opportunity for African economies to build resilience by diversifying their economic partnerships and seeking out lenders with better terms and different motivations.

"I and other CNA analysts from our China Studies and Strategy and Policy Analysis programs have just completed a series of studies on trends in the involvement of the PRC across major sectors in Africa in the context of global shocks. These include the military, mining, infrastructure, and financial sectors. We recently released the report PRC Lending in Africa: Impacts in a Time of Global Shocks. This component of the series focuses on PRC lending to nine African countries. In some cases, PRC loans helped African nations build or upgrade much-needed infrastructure. However, we also found a wide range of PRC lending practices that have contributed to the financial distress and increased the risk of default for African countries ravaged by the global shocks of the last few years. These practices include high interest rates, unfavorable terms, and uncompetitive contracting, most of which is hidden from the public in opaque contracts.

"And when African countries struggle to repay those loans, PRC lenders have taken inflexible positions that have delayed and hardened terms in renegotiations.

"China’s Unforgiving Lenders

"Today’s debt troubles have some of their roots in the loan agreements signed when the PRC was eager to plow its excess savings into foreign loans. Often these agreements made the loans due in just 10 years, compared to up to 35 years for loans from the World Bank. Interest rates are often higher, too. For example, the Export–Import Bank of China charged Djibouti a fully commercial rate for the loan to build the Ethiopia-Djibouti railway, higher than multinational lenders like the World Bank charge for loans. The PRC is #Djibouti’s largest creditor, holding approximately $1.4 billion in debt, equal to about 45 percent of the country’s GDP. In January 2023, Djibouti suspended debt payments to the PRC, making it the second African nation—after #Zambia—to do so.

"Often these agreements require loan recipients to give business to PRC contractors—without competitive bidding. The Export–Import Bank of China contract with #Kenya to finance the Standard Gauge Railway connecting the port city of Mombasa to the Great Rift Valley stipulated that most construction materials would be purchased from the PRC. The project ended up much more costly than anticipated, increasing from 220 billion to 327 billion Kenyan shillings over a period of three years. The Kenya Court of Appeal found that 'the project’s design was manipulated to inflate costs while construction and supervision charges were also overpriced.' Such agreements have helped make China’s construction firms dominant on the continent. A University of London study found that of the 32 major international contractor companies working major construction projects in Ethiopia in 2017, 80 percent were PRC contractors.

"Because PRC loan agreements tend to be opaque, the public is usually not even aware of these loan terms. In the case of the Standard Gauge Railway, the loan with the Export–Import Bank of China was signed in 2014, but details about the terms only became publicly known in 2022, preventing oversight from Kenyan politicians or the public. In some cases, those opaque agreements and #unethical business practices may contribute to corruption. The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China funded a dam project in Angola while ignoring various potential red flags, including the involvement of the daughter of Angolan President José Eduardo dos Santos. Isabel dos Santos was awarded the $4.5 billion contract to construct the dam by her father’s government in 2015. As of 2023, Angola holds more PRC debt than any other country in Africa. And the #WorldBank listed Angola as one of seven African countries that it considered to be at high risk of debt distress in 2020.

"Our research found that when struggling African nations need to renegotiate their loans, PRC lenders have resisted standard #LoanForgiveness practices and have slowed debt negotiations. The PRC does not follow typical debt negotiation protocols used by multilateral institutions such as the World Bank. Instead, the PRC prefers bilateral negotiations, often behind closed doors, and strongly resists cutting the total principal owed on loans. Rather, PRC lenders favor extending repayment periods or holding infrastructure as collateral on loans. This has an impact on negotiations with other creditors as well, since lenders want concessions to be shared fairly. Recent negotiations to restructure #Chad’s debt with a committee of five bilateral creditors took nearly two years. World Bank and IMF officials claimed that lenders from China unnecessarily delayed the debt deal, an accusation that has come up in debt negotiations with other African countries.

"In the long run, however, this difficult period could have an upside for African nations. The reduction in PRC loans provides an opportunity for African countries to diversify, considering new economic partnerships on more favorable terms, with greater transparency and good governance. African nations can use multilateral negotiations to seek out lenders operating with different motivations, lenders that can help them build domestic economic strength and resilience for the future."

Source:
https://www.cna.org/our-media/indepth/2024/03/china-loans-to-africa

#BeltAndRoadInitiative #BRI #LoanSharks #CancelAllDebt

Dangers and Opportunities as China’s Loans to Africa Come Due

In Africa, China’s infrastructure loans, secretive contracts, and inflexible debt negotiations have caused economic and debt distress in some countries.

So, another evil thing in the world is how countries are given loans (which are often mismanaged) instead of just being helped out by other countries. The indebted countries are then forced to stoop to #environmental degradation (like selling forests to mining interests) and #HumanRights violations to pay back the debts.

Activists Disrupt Meeting to Demand '#LoanSharks' IMF and World Bank Cancel All Debt

by Brett Wilkins
Oct 11, 2022

"We need #localization and #ecological #sustainability for the people, planet, and peace," said #CodePink's Nancy Mancias. "We are calling on the IMF and #WorldBank to end its debt trap monetary practices which are causing countries to sink further down into economic crises."

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2022/10/11/activists-disrupt-meeting-demand-loan-sharks-imf-and-world-bank-cancel-all-debt

Explainer: Who holds #Ghana's debt and what restructuring is planned?

By Rachel Savage and Marc Jones
December 9, 2022

https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/who-holds-ghanas-debt-what-restructuring-is-planned-2022-12-09/

Critics Say IMF Loan Fees Are Hurting Nations in Desperate Need

Democratic lawmakers say the global fund’s surcharges for emergency relief siphon away money that countries need to fight the pandemic.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/14/business/economy/imf-surcharges.html

#IMFLoans #IMFLoanSharks #CancelAllDebt #TaxTheRichToHelpThePoor #WealthRedistribution #ChineseLoans #WorldBank

Activists Disrupt Meeting to Demand 'Loan Sharks' IMF and World Bank Cancel All Debt | Common Dreams

"We are calling on the IMF and World Bank to end its debt trap monetary practices which are causing countries to sink further down into economic crises," says CodePink's Nancy Mancias on the day she and Olivia DiNucci protested at IMF headquarters.

Common Dreams
SpyLoan Loan Shark Scammers Arrested in Tanzania

Loan Shark Scammers get arrested according to Media Reports

Alameen Karim Merali's Substack Page
Scammers finding new ways to social engineer victims

This is tied to my previous article about Loan Sharks, where I talked about SpyLoan Malware Research with these scammers exploiting our fellow Tanzanian Citizens. You can read the article from here…

Medium

‘I just kept paying’: Indigenous people are being exploited by businesses using Centrepay debit scheme https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2024/mar/30/centrelink-centrepay-scheme-welfare-payments-first-nations-indigenous-people-impact?CMP=share_btn_url

Centrelink shouldn't be an agency for predatory lenders. #centrelink #loansharks #Australiafirstnations #indigenousaustralians

‘I just kept paying’: Indigenous people are being exploited by businesses using Centrepay debit scheme

Many of those who sign up are from regional or remote communities, speak English as a second or third language and have limited access to clothing, household goods and services

The Guardian
Grootste banken boeken hun hoogste winsten ooit https://nos.nl/l/2508076 Ahhh, daar zit dus onze rente op spaartegoeden. #rabobank #abnamro #ing #loansharks #moneyhoarders
Grootste banken boeken hun hoogste winsten ooit

Rabobank heeft nooit eerder in zijn 125-jarige bestaan zo veel winst gemaakt. Ook voor ING was 2023 een recordjaar.

NOS Nieuws