Cuba begins to pay debts to Western creditors, beats deadline
October 27, 2016
By Marc Frank
HAVANA, Oct 27 (Reuters) - Cuba has paid ahead of schedule the first 
installment of a renegotiated $2.6 billion debt to 14 wealthy 
governments, according to diplomats from a number of the countries, as 
the Communist-run island seeks to overcome its chronic payment history.
Cuba reached a deal in December with members of Paris Club of creditor 
nations that forgave $8.5 billion of $11.1 billion official debt it had 
defaulted on through 1986, plus charges. Repayment of the remaining debt 
was structured over 18 years, and the first payment of about $40 million 
was due by Oct. 31.
The deal was seen as a step toward Cuba rejoining the international 
financial community in the context of detente with the United States and 
future competition from U.S. businesses.
"The Cuban government has paid the first installment, and done so 
early," France's ambassador to Cuba, Jean-Marie Bruno, said on late on 
Wednesday.
"This is a very important signal that Cuba intends to honor its 
commitments and a key first step in gaining access to the multilateral 
lenders," a foreign banker with years of experience in Cuba said on 
Thursday on condition of anonymity.
Cuba is not a member of any multilateral lending institution such as the 
International Monetary Fund.
Under the December agreement, the 14 nations had a year to sign 
bilateral restructuring deals which could include the establishment of 
local accounts where a percentage of money owed would be deposited for 
local joint development projects.
"The government of each participating creditor country or its 
appropriate institutions may sell or exchange in the framework of debt 
swap" a large proportion of remaining debt, according to the agreement 
seen by Reuters.
The four largest creditors, France, Spain, Japan and Italy, have all 
signed agreements, as have Australia, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Great 
Britain, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland and Finland. Canada has 
yet to sign.
During Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to Cuba in September, 
the countries agreed that of the roughly $592 million owed Japan, $350 
million would be paid directly to the government and another $242 
million deposited in Cuba for use in development projects.
Spain, France, Italy, the Netherlands and perhaps others have signed 
similar deals, with total sums to be invested in Cuba, including Japan, 
topping $750 million of the $2.6 billion owed.
Payments, due annually by Oct. 31, gradually increase from 1.6 percent 
of the $2.6 billion owed to 8.9 percent in 2033.
(Reporting by Marc Frank; Editing by Richard Chang)
Source: Cuba begins to pay debts to Western creditors, beats deadline - 
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/cuba-begins-pay-debts-western-180853206.html;_ylt=AwrC0F9dVBNYWwwA4cfQtDMD;_ylu=X3oDMTByOHZyb21tBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDBHNlYwNzcg--
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