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Global debt is set to reach US$200-trillion, or 265 per cent of the world’s annual economic output, by the end of the year, S&P Global has forecast -- although it doesn’t expect a crisis any time soon.

The credit-rating giant said it amounts to a 14-point rise as a percentage of world GDP, having been amplified by both the economic plunge caused by COVID-19 and the extra borrowing that governments, firms and households have had to resort to.

“Global debt-to-GDP has been trending up for many years; the pandemic simply exacerbated the rise,” S&P’s report said.

Yet, despite the big jump and an expected wave of defaults over the coming year, the firm does not expect a major crisis at this stage.

“The projected 14-per-cent surge in global debt-to-GDP in 2020 is unlikely to cause a near-term debt crisis, provided economies recover, vaccines are widely distributed, interest rates remain very low, and borrowing behaviour moderates,” the report said.

As long as the world economy gets back on its feet after the pandemic, the global debt-to-GDP ratio should ease back to 256 per cent by 2023, S&P said.

“We expect the debt growth of corporates, governments, and household to ease as they tend to after recessions,” the report added.


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