20 countries drowning in debt
Swamped by massive loans

Almost every country in the world has sovereign debt – in fact, some of the world’s most powerful economies have a lot of it. Yet while it’s perfectly healthy to accrue debt to finance growth, some countries are bearing a serious burden. Using the World Economic Forum's debt-to-GDP ratio for 2017 (the latest year for which figures are available), here are the countries with the highest debt-to-GDP ratios in the world. We haven't included countries with economies smaller than $10 billion GDP.
20) Brazil – 84%

19) UK – 88%

18) Bahrain – 89%

17) Canada – 90%

16) Jordan – 96%

15) France – 97%

14) Cyprus – 98%

13) Spain – 98%

Up until 2007, Spain was doing a good job of reducing its national debt. Yet the Great Recession, worsened by a real estate bubble in 2008, plunged the country into trouble, with property developers going bust and banks left crippled by debt. Spain's debt-to-GDP ratio went from 36% in 2007 to 98% in 2017.
12) Jamaica – 101%

11) Mozambique – 102%

10) Egypt – 103%

After the Arab Spring, Egypt has experienced several years of political crisis and its economy has suffered as a result. The current government has been borrowing heavily to pay off a huge deficit. Despite hefty tax rises and public sector reform, the national debt-to-GDP ratio has ballooned from 87.1% in 2013 to 103% in 2017. In response, at the end of last year Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly announced increasing austerity measures which include rising food and transport costs, although some economists worry the measures will be ineffectual.
9) Belgium – 103.4%

8) USA – 105.2%

Despite the fact it's currently experiencing the second-longest economic expansion since the post-World War II boom, American national debt is at high rates not seen since the 1940s. On the campaign trail, president Trump promised to lighten the load of national debt yet he's done anything but, with the 2017 corporate tax cut projected to slow down growth as interest rates increase. The debt-to-GDP ratio currently stands at 105.2%.
7) Singapore – 111.1%

6) Sudan – 121.5%

5) Portugal – 125.7%

4) Italy – 131.8%

3) Lebanon – 146.8%

2) Greece – 181.8%

Greece is in the middle of a debt crisis that had its roots in the 2008 global financial crisis. The Greek recession that followed has been described as the longest recession that any capitalist economy has endured, worse than the US Great Depression of the 1930s. Despite numerous attempts at reform, the Greek economy had to be bailed out in 2010, 2012 and 2015, and it was the first country not to repay an IMF loan on time.
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1) Japan – 237.6%

Two decades of economic stagnation and a series of failed stimulus plans have plunged Japan into severe public debt. Like Singapore however, most of this debt is internal rather than external and more easily managed, plus prime minister Shinzo Abe's 'Abenomics' financial reforms in recent years have helped stabilize the ratio and significantly improve Japan's future economic prospects.
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