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Essays on Sovereign Debt Crisis

Essays on Sovereign Debt Crisis
Author: Michinao Okachi
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN:

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This thesis consists of three chapters that aim to develop economic models to explain sovereign debt crises. Chapter 2 provides the dynamic general equilibrium model of endogenous sovereign default, incorporating financial intermediaries. By a government's decision to default, government bonds become non-performing and financial intermediaries eliminate them from their net worth. While other literature on endogenous default models assumes that the default state is exogenously given, only depending on TFP or endowment, the model in Chapter 2 creates a mechanism by which the default state is contingent on the amount of debt outstanding in the non-default state. Through this feature, the model quantifies the financial amplification effect on the economy and shows the phenomenon of "Too-Big-to-Default". The model explains the important features of the Argentinean default in 2001, capturing the default frequency, the debt-to-GDP ratio and moments of main variables. Chapter 3 proposes a new sovereign debt crisis model which is applicable to an advanced country, assuming the government's incapability to serve its debts rather than willingness of repayment. The fiscal limit is defined as the sum of discounted future primary surplus under the tax rate to maximize tax revenue. When the debt outstanding exceeds the fiscal limit, the government falls into debt crisis. The economic contraction in the crisis results from the exogenous tax rate and decreased imported inputs. The model replicates the high debt-to-GDP ratio, which the endogenous model cannot assume, and captures movements of important variables of the Spanish debt crisis in around 2012. Chapter 4 introduce foreign bonds based on the model in Chapter 3, for the analysis of several countries such as Greece and Ireland in which a majority of bonds is held by foreign agents. In the model, the government issues bonds for foreign investors, and that leads the outflow of domestic output. Instead of government bonds, households adopt capital for their inter-temporal utility maximization. Also, the fiscal limit is drawn from the exogenous distribution. The simulation result for the Greek economy generally explains the contraction of its economy by the crisis in around 2012 although the effect of imported inputs is overestimated and that of domestic inputs is underestimated.


Essays on Sovereign Default

Essays on Sovereign Default
Author: Tiago Gomes da Silva Tavares
Publisher:
Total Pages: 124
Release: 2015
Genre: Debts, External
ISBN:

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"This dissertation contributes to literature of International Economics and, in particular, of Sovereign Default with the study of three distinct issues. In the first chapter, I study the role of international reserves in sovereign debt restructuring episodes when fiscal adjustment is costly. This study departs from the observation that highly indebted developing economies commonly also hold large external reserves. This behavior seems puzzling given that governments in these countries borrow with an interest rate penalty to compensate lenders for default risk. Reducing debt to the same extent as reserves would maintain net liabilities constant while decreasing interest payments. However, holding reserves can have insurance benefits in a financial crisis. To rationalize the levels of international reserves and external debt observed in the data, a standard dynamic model of equilibrium default is extended to include distortionary taxation and debt restructuring. This chapter shows that fiscal adjustments induced by sovereign default can generate large demand for reserves if taxation is distortionary. At the same time, a non-negligible position in reserves modifies the debt restructuring negotiations upon default. A calibrated version of the model produces recovery rate schedules that are increasing with reserves, as seen in the data, being also able to replicate large positions of reserves and debt to GDP. Finally, I study how both mechanisms play a key quantitative role to generate such result, in fact, not including them, produces a counterfactual demand for reserves that is close to zero. In the second chapter, the relationship between labor market distortions and sovereign debt crises is explored. It is noted that risk of sovereign debt default has frequently affected both emerging market and developed economies. Such financial crises are often accompanied with severe declines of employment that are hard to justify using a standard dynamic stochastic model. In this chapter, I document that a labor wedge deteriorates substantially around swift reversals of current accounts or default episodes. I propose and evaluate two different explanations for these movements by linking the wedges to changes in labor taxes and in the cost of working capital. With these two features included, a dynamic model of equilibrium default is able to replicate the behavior of the labor wedge observed in the data around financial crisis. In the model, higher interest rates are propagated into larger costs of hiring labor through the presence of working capital. As an economy is hit with a stream of bad productivity shocks, the incentives to default become stronger, thus increasing the cost of debt. This reduces firm demand for labor and generates a labor wedge. A similar effect is obtained with a countercyclical tax rate policy. The model is used to shed light on the recent events of the Euro Area debt crisis and in particular of the Greek default event. Finally, in the third chapter, I develop a debt-to-output decomposition and document that a large fraction of the increase in the debt to output ratio during default is accounted by variations in the exchange rate. Also, using a large dataset on historical sovereign debt crises, it is shown in this chapter that devaluations of the exchange rate during periods of default are positively associated with international investor losses (haircuts) when debt is restructured. These results can be rationalized with the fact that large real devaluation decrease output when measured in foreign goods, thus reducing the availability of resources that can be used during negotiations. This implies that exchange rate fluctuations are an important source of risk in emerging economies affecting, among other things, debt dynamics and restructuring outcomes. As such, I conclude that most of the exchange rate neglect, typical in the sovereign default literature, should be seriously reconsidered"--Pages iii-v.


Essays on Sovereign Debt in the Euro Area

Essays on Sovereign Debt in the Euro Area
Author: Niccolo Battistini
Publisher:
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2017
Genre: Debts, Public
ISBN:

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This dissertation explores the interaction between sovereign debt and investor preferences in the euro area during the recent crisis from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective. From an empirical perspective, in Chapter 2 (written with Marco Pagano and Saverio Simonelli), we investigate the relationship between the divergence of sovereign yields and CDS premia and the rise in banks' home bias, as well as its rationale. Our approach is based on (i) the decomposition of yield differentials and CDS spreads in a country-specific and a common risk component via a dynamic factor model and (ii) the estimation of a vector error-correction model on 2008-12 monthly data. We find that (i) in euro area periphery countries, banks increase their domestic exposure in response to increases in country risk and (ii) in most euro area countries, banks respond to an increase in the common risk factor by raising their domestic exposures. Finding (i) suggests distorted incentives in periphery banks' response to changes in their own sovereign's risk. Finding (ii) indicates that, when systemic risk increases, all banks tend to increase the home bias of their portfolios, making the euro area sovereign market more segmented. Policy implications are finally drawn from these findings. From a theoretical perspective, Chapters 3 and 4 analyze the interactions between macroeconomic fundamentals and debtor and creditor incentives through the lenses of dynamic general equilibrium models with strategic sovereign default. In Chapter 3, I provide a theoretical framework to understand three phenomena occurred at the onset of the recent sovereign debt crisis: (1) the increase in investor risk aversion, (2) the reversal in the process of union-wide financial integration and (3) the rise in the perceived imperfect substitutability of government bonds. Advancing a novel approach to modelling optimal portfolio strategy, the model assumes investors to exhibit preferences with a constant elasticity of substitution between bonds, which is inversely related to the degree of risk aversion, perceived financial segmentation and imperfect asset substitutability. Consistently with empirical evidence, a low elasticity, representing adverse market sentiments, implies a high sensitivity of yields to macroeconomic fundamentals. In an empirical assessment, the model captures several features of Greek sovereign yields, debt and default before and during the crisis. Finally, Chapter 4 proposes a comprehensive analytical framework for the assessment of fiscal sustainability in the euro area. The standard Eaton-Gersovitz model is enriched with two novel features to reflect salient features of euro area economies. First, the presence of domestically held debt implies that a sovereign default, through lower repayments on sovereign debt, determines both benefits for the public sector and costs for private domestic investors. As the sovereign seeks to maximize domestic welfare, a higher domestic share of debt increases the government's incentives to honor its obligations and, thus, expands its borrowing opportunities. Second, the introduction of credible supranational fiscal rules creates the possibility for self-fulfilling debt crises and, accordingly, increases the borrowing costs for the government. In this way, fiscal rules reduce the sovereign's optimal level of debt and foster market-based fiscal discipline. In an empirical application, the calibrated average euro area country faces a low risk of default, but it can reap both welfare and sustainability gains through fiscal consolidation.


Sovereign Debt Crises

Sovereign Debt Crises
Author: Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2017-11-02
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1108245579

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There is an obvious need to learn more about why some countries succeed and others fail when dealing with debt crises. Why do some sovereign debtors overcome economic problems very quickly and at minor human rights costs for their people, while others remain trapped by debts for years struggling with overwhelming debt burdens and exacerbating economic problems and human suffering? This book analyzes fourteen unique or singular country cases of sovereign debt problems that differ characteristically from the 'ordinary' debtor countries, and have not yet received enough or proper attention - some regarded as successful, some as unsuccessful in dealing with debt crises. The aim is to contribute to a better understanding of the policy options available to countries struggling with debt problems, or how to resolve a debt overhang while protecting human rights, the Rule of Law and the debtor's economic recovery.


Essays on the Global Financial Crisis

Essays on the Global Financial Crisis
Author: Heiko Hesse
Publisher:
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN: 9781475544121

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The Global Financial Crisis has been a watershed event not only for many advanced economies but also emerging markets around the world. This book brings together research and policy work over the last nine years from staff at the IMF. It covers a wide range of issues such as the origins of the financial crisis, the policy response, spillovers and contagion, case studies, bank stress testing, and debt sustainability and sovereign debt restructuring.