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Debt Service Ratio: How Much of a Country's External Earnings Go to Debt Payments

Learn what the debt service ratio means in macroeconomic analysis and why it matters when judging a country's external debt burden.

The debt service ratio is a macroeconomic measure that shows how much of a country’s external earnings must be used to meet debt-service obligations.

It is often discussed in the context of sovereign or external debt analysis rather than household lending.

Core Idea

The ratio asks a practical policy question:

“How large is the country’s debt-payment burden relative to the foreign earnings it can use to pay?”

That is why the ratio is often tied to export earnings or broader current external receipts.

Common Formula

One common form is:

$$ \text{Debt Service Ratio} = \frac{\text{External Debt Service Payments}}{\text{Export Earnings}} \times 100 $$

Depending on the source, the denominator may be defined more broadly than exports alone, but the purpose remains the same.

Why It Matters

A high debt service ratio can signal that a large share of external income is being consumed by interest and principal payments.

That may leave less room for:

  • imports

  • reserve accumulation

  • policy flexibility

  • crisis response

What a Rising Ratio Can Mean

A rising ratio may reflect:

  • larger debt payments

  • weaker export earnings

  • currency pressure

  • refinancing difficulty

It does not always mean default is imminent, but it can be an important warning sign.

Debt Service Ratio vs. Debt-to-GDP Ratio

Debt-to-GDP ratio compares debt with the size of the domestic economy.

Debt service ratio compares actual payment burden with the external earnings used to make those payments.

One is a stock comparison. The other is a flow burden measure.

Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026