By Andrea Shalal and Karin Strohecker

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Top U.S. and Chinese officials joined a meeting on Wednesday of the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable, where a key topic was the lack of transparency about commercial bank loans that have complicated developing countries’ debt restructuring efforts.

The International Monetary Fund, World Bank and current G20 president South Africa issued a progress report after the meeting, calling for continued efforts to address elevated debt vulnerabilities, particularly in low-income countries.

It said debt levels in low-income countries and emerging economies had generally stabilized, but remained higher than during the pre-COVID-19 era, with a few being particularly vulnerable. Many also faced elevated debt-service challenges, crowding out spending on education, health and infrastructure.

“Recent shifts in global policies and cuts in foreign aid add to the challenges,” the report said, underscoring the need for domestic reforms by debtor countries to boost growth, with specific attention to rising domestic debt vulnerabilities.

Participants agreed to keep working to improve debt restructuring processes, including looking for ways to accelerate the restructuring of non-bonded commercial debt, accelerating support to countries with sustainable debt but high debt-service challenges, and strengthening transparency.

IMF strategy chief Ceyla Pazarbasioglu said the continued participation of the U.S. and China in the roundtable, despite a fierce trade war dividing the world’s two largest economies, showed their commitment to keep addressing the high debt levels hurting developing countries.

The roundtable, which met during the annual meetings of the IMF and the World Bank in Washington, had led to progress in shortening the timelines of official debt restructurings and reworking bonded debt, but there was more work to do on non-bonded debt, Pazarbasioglu told reporters before the meeting.

“These discussions have been important to get everyone on the same page,” she said. “The fact that tomorrow we will have the U.S. Treasury Secretary (Scott Bessent) there, China will be there, and others will be there, is a sign that they are still committed to this discussion.”

CALL FOR TRANSPARENCY OVER DEBT

The progress report showed that transparency was a shared concern, especially regarding non-bonded debt.

“Non-bonded debt is the laggard at this point,” Pazarbasioglu said, noting some countries had moved through a restructuring but still faced bank exposures or other loans that prevented credit ratings agencies from removing their default status and raising ratings.

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