The total external debt of the world's poorest countries climbed 9.5 per cent to a record 744 billion US dollars in 2019, according to the World Bank Group's latest International Debt Statistics (IDS) report released Monday.
"Before the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, rising public debt levels were already a cause for concern, particularly in many of the world's poorest countries," the World Bank said.
The multilateral lender this in a statement during the annual meetings of the World Bank Group and International Monetary Fund (IMF), reports Xinhua.
The Group of Twenty (G20) endorsed the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) in April this year to help up to 73 of the poorest countries manage the impact of the pandemic, allowing them to suspend payments on official bilateral debt until the end of 2020, the World Bank noted.
World Bank Group President David Malpass previously urged the G20 countries to extend the time frame of the DSSI through the end of 2021 and commit to give the initiative as broad a scope as possible.
The latest IDS report showed that the total external debt of countries eligible for the G20 debt relief programme climbed to a record last year, "highlighting an urgent need for creditors and borrowers alike to collaborate to stave off the growing risk of sovereign-debt crises triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic."
The pace of debt accumulation for these countries was nearly twice the rate of other low- and middle-income countries in 2019, the report noted.
"It's been very important that leaders of poorest nations speak up and speak out about the need for a lighter debt burden from the creditor nations," Malpass said on Twitter on Monday.
"That dialogue hasn't been as robust yet as I think is necessary to move this process along," said the World Bank chief.
Finance ministers and central bank governors from the G20 economies are scheduled to meet virtually on Wednesday, and could make a decision on further extension of debt service relief.