VoxDev Development Economics

S7 Ep16: The rise and fall of China's overseas lending

12 snips
Mar 25, 2026
Sebastian Horn, economist at the Kiel Institute and University of Hamburg who studies international finance and sovereign debt. He charts China’s $1 trillion lending boom to developing countries and its collapse after 2019. Short, sharp stories about who lent, how loans were collateralized, risky borrowers like Venezuela and Angola, and the unfolding “silent crisis” as repayments now exceed new commitments.
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INSIGHT

Boom Ended Abruptly Around 2019

  • The lending boom reversed sharply around 2019 as commodity prices fell, the pandemic hit, US rates rose and the dollar appreciated.
  • Net flows turned negative: developing countries now repay more to Chinese banks than they receive in new lending.
ANECDOTE

Detective Work Behind Chinese Lending Datasets

  • Researchers build datasets from embassy statements, bank reports, parliamentary gazettes, contractors, and news because China offers no consolidated data.
  • Horn describes this as detective work that has become a public-good effort with teams like AidData contributing.
INSIGHT

Half Of Loans Secured By Commodity Revenue Accounts

  • About half of Chinese loans are collateralized against commodity export revenues deposited in offshore accounts controlled by Chinese banks.
  • Contracts often pair a loan with a commodity delivery agreement so creditors can seize accumulated export proceeds if default occurs.
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