Abstract:
This paper appraises the efforts of official creditors to help highly indebted developing countries escape the
vicious cycle of debt unsustainability. It examines three major models through which highly indebted developing
countries were assisted to achieve debt sustainability, namely; the Baker Plan, the Brady Plan and the Highly
Indebted Poor Countries Initiative. In spite of the huge monetary costs incurred to run these programmes, debt
sustainability continues to be a major challenge for most of the economies that benefitted from debt relief. The
example of Ghana, a beneficiary of the Highly Indebted Poor Countries Initiative is highlighted to support the
general evidence from literature. Highly indebted developing countries certainly need more than debt relief, and
it is probably becoming clearer that money may not be the most important need of developing economies.