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Sovereign borrowers launch platform to amplify voice in debt talks

By Thomson Reuters Apr 15, 2026 | 2:06 PM

By Rodrigo Campos

April 15 (Reuters) – A group of officials from developing economies launched on Wednesday the Borrowers’ Platform, an effort backed by the United Nations to give debt-hit nations a stronger collective voice in dealings ​with creditors.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said at the launch event that ‌the platform is essential for power relations to change.

“Today, we launch a breakthrough in global financing, a platform in which borrowing countries sit together, learn from each other and speak with a collective voice,” Guterres said.

He said 3.4 billion people live in countries that spend more on debt service ‌than ​on health or education.

The initiative is seen partly as ⁠a counter for institutions like ⁠the Paris Club, where official creditors meet to discuss negotiation strategies when a common debtor encounters problems with repayment.

This platform aims also to be an experience repository of sorts, where members share their knowledge and new governments, or new ​countries, avoid arriving at the table with a lack of preparedness.

“What was once a long-standing aspiration of developing countries has now become a concrete and a ⁠collective step forward,” said Ahmed Kouchouk, Egypt’s ⁠finance minister. “Today stands as a strong statement of intent that the ​voice of borrowing nations and countries belongs at the very center of the global ​financial dialogue.”

The event, presided over by Egypt as chair of the ‌working group, is due to formally open an interim phase for the platform, establish interim leadership and adopt a work program running through October 2026, according to the launch agenda.

The working group that developed the draft modalities was made up of Egypt, ⁠Colombia, Honduras, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Zambia. Pakistan served as vice chair.

Under the draft framework, full membership would be voluntary and limited to developing countries that are UN ⁠member states, net borrowers and ‌not full members of creditor groupings. The proposed structure ⁠includes a Governing Council of finance ministers, central bank governors ​or equivalent ‌officials, and a Steering Committee of senior technical officials.

“The ​launch of the ⁠Borrowers’ Platform is a major milestone in rebalancing power inequalities in global economic governance,” said Iolanda Fresnillo, policy and advocacy manager at the European Network on Debt and Development (Eurodad), in a statement.

“This long-overdue initiative is a first step towards breaking creditor domination over decision-making on sovereign debt issues.”

(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos in New York, Editing by Franklin ​Paul and Andrea Ricci)