Sovereign debt is different.
Private debt contracts can be enforced in court and court rulings enforced by
asset seizures. By contrast, public-debt creditors:
·
Lack procedures for enforcing sovereign debt contracts – partly due to the
principle of sovereign immunity.
·
Have ill-defined claims on the sovereign's assets as they cannot attach
assets located within the sovereign’s borders, and typically have limited
success in going after sovereign assets located abroad.
Since contracts cannot be
enforced, why do sovereigns repay and why do lenders lend?
The economist's natural answer
is that it must be the case that repaying is cheaper than defaulting (Dooley
2000). But what are the costs of default? In a seminal paper that kick-started
the sovereign debt literature, Eaton and Gersovitz (1981) focused on
reputational costs and showed that, under certain conditions, the threat of
permanent exclusion from financial markets is a sufficient condition for
repaying. Successive work by Bulow and Rogoff (1989) emphasised the possibility
of trade sanctions. Cole and Kehoe (1998) showed that positive lending can be
sustained even if creditors cannot punish defaulting countries. In this class
of theoretical models incentives to pay come from the fact that a default would
reveal negative information about the government to other parties that are
engaging in transactions with the defaulting government (for a detailed
discussion, see Panizza et al. 2009).
Measuring
the costs of default
In a recent paper (Borensztein
and Panizza 2009), we look at four possible costs of default: loss of
reputation, reductions in trade, costs to the domestic economy, and political
costs (Inter-American Development Bank 2006 provides a detailed description of
default episodes over the last two hundred years).
We start with reputational
costs and show that defaulting countries do indeed suffer in terms of access to
the international capital markets. Default episodes are associated with an
immediate drop of credit rating and a jump in sovereign spreads of
approximately 400 basis points. However, this effect tends to be short lived
and disappears between three and five years after the default episode.
When we look at trade costs,
we add support to Rose's (2005) result that default episodes are associated
with a drop in bilateral trade, but we are not able to identify the channel
through which default has an effect on trade. In a companion paper (Borensztein
and Panizza forthcoming), we also find a trade effect using industry-level data
but, again, we find that the effect tends to be short lived and only lasts two
to three years.
When we explore the effect of
default on GDP growth, we find that, on average, default episodes are
associated with a decrease in output growth of 2.5 percentage points in the
year of the default episode. However, we find no significant growth effect in
the years that follow the default episode. In fact, quarterly data indicate
that output contractions tend to precede defaults and that output starts
growing after the quarter in which the default took place (Levy et al.
forthcoming). This suggests that the negative effects of a default on output
are likely to be driven by the anticipation of default.
Delayed
defaults
While economic models often
assume that policymakers have the incentive to default too early or too often,
in the real world politicians and bureaucrats go to a great length to postpone
what seems to be an unavoidable default. In the case of Argentina, for
instance, even Wall Street bankers had to persuade the policymaking authorities
to accept reality and initiate a debt restructuring (Blustein 2005).
There are two possible reasons
for this reluctance. The first relates to the fact that default episodes seem
to have high political costs. We find that, on average, ruling governments in
countries that defaulted observed a 16 percentage point decrease in electoral
support. We also look at changes in top economic officials and show that in any
given tranquil year there is a 19% probability of observing a change in the
finance minister, but after a default episode the probability jumps to 26%. The
presence of such political costs has two implications. On the positive side, a
high political cost would increase the country’s willingness to pay and hence
its level of sustainable debt. On the negative side, politically costly
defaults might lead to ‘‘gambles for redemption’’ and possibly amplify the
eventual economic costs of default if the gamble does not pay off and results
in larger economic costs.
It is also possible that
policymakers postpone default to ensure that there is broad market consensus
that the decision is unavoidable and not strategic. This would be in line with
the model in Grossman and Van Huyck (1988) whereby ‘‘strategic’’ defaults are
very costly in terms of reputation – and that is why they are almost never
observed in practice – while ‘‘unavoidable’’ defaults carry limited reputation
loss in the markets. Hence, choosing the lesser of the two evils, policymakers
would postpone the inevitable default decision in order to avoid a higher
reputational cost, even at a higher economic cost during the delay. If this
interpretation is correct, a third-party institution that can sanction when
countries cannot avoid a debt restructuring could play an important role in
reducing the deadweight loss of default.
What
about Greece?
The recent experience suggests
that the economic costs of default may not be as high as it is commonly
thought, and that economic recovery has often started soon after default. It is
worth noting, however, that in all defaults studied in our work the economic
recovery was helped by exchange-rate depreciation. Since this does not seem to
be an option for countries that belong to the Eurozone (for reasons that are well
explained in Eichengreen 2007), Greece may pay a steep cost if it were to
default. For this reason, we hope that rescue plan launched on 2 May will work
and that Greece will not belong to the sample when we update our paper on the
costs of default.
References
Blustein, Paul (2005), And the
Money Kept Rolling In (and Out): Wall Street, the IMF, and the Bankrupting of
Argentina, Public Affairs, New York.
Borensztein, Eduardo and Ugo Panizza (2009), “The Costs of Sovereign Default”, IMF Staff Papers, 56:683-741.
Borensztein, Eduardo and Ugo Panizza, (2008), “Do Sovereign Defaults Hurt Exporters?”, Open Economies Review
Bulow, Jeremy and Kenneth Rogoff (1989), “A Constant Recontracting Model of Sovereign Debt”, Journal of Political Economy, 97:155-178.
Cole, Harold and Patrick Kehoe (1998), “Models of Sovereign Debt: Partial versus General Reputations”, International Economic Review, 39:55-70.
Dooley, Michael (2000), “International Financial Architecture and Strategic Default: Can Financial Crises be Less Painful?”, Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, 53:361–377.
Eaton, Jonathan, and Mark Gersovitz (1981), “Debt with Potential Repudiation: Theoretical and Empirical Analysis”, Review of Economic Studies, 48:289-309.
Eichengreen, Barry (2007), “The euro: love it or leave it?”, VoxEU.org, 17 November.
Grossman, Herschel and John Van Huyck (1988), “Sovereign Debt as a Contingent Claim: Excusable Default, Repudiation, and Reputation”,American Economic Review, 78:1088–1097.
Inter-American Development Bank (2006). Living with Debt. Inter-American Development Bank and Harvard University Press.
Levy Yeyati, Eduardo and Ugo Panizza (forthcoming), “The Elusive Costs of Sovereign Default”, Journal of Development Economics.
Panizza, Ugo, Federico Sturzenegger, and Jeromin Zettelmeyer (2009), “The Economics and Law of Sovereign Debt and Default”, Journal of Economic Literature, 47:651-98.
Rose, Andrew (2005), “One Reason Countries Pay their Debts: Renegotiation and International Trade”, Journal of Development Economics, 77:189-206.
Borensztein, Eduardo and Ugo Panizza (2009), “The Costs of Sovereign Default”, IMF Staff Papers, 56:683-741.
Borensztein, Eduardo and Ugo Panizza, (2008), “Do Sovereign Defaults Hurt Exporters?”, Open Economies Review
Bulow, Jeremy and Kenneth Rogoff (1989), “A Constant Recontracting Model of Sovereign Debt”, Journal of Political Economy, 97:155-178.
Cole, Harold and Patrick Kehoe (1998), “Models of Sovereign Debt: Partial versus General Reputations”, International Economic Review, 39:55-70.
Dooley, Michael (2000), “International Financial Architecture and Strategic Default: Can Financial Crises be Less Painful?”, Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, 53:361–377.
Eaton, Jonathan, and Mark Gersovitz (1981), “Debt with Potential Repudiation: Theoretical and Empirical Analysis”, Review of Economic Studies, 48:289-309.
Eichengreen, Barry (2007), “The euro: love it or leave it?”, VoxEU.org, 17 November.
Grossman, Herschel and John Van Huyck (1988), “Sovereign Debt as a Contingent Claim: Excusable Default, Repudiation, and Reputation”,American Economic Review, 78:1088–1097.
Inter-American Development Bank (2006). Living with Debt. Inter-American Development Bank and Harvard University Press.
Levy Yeyati, Eduardo and Ugo Panizza (forthcoming), “The Elusive Costs of Sovereign Default”, Journal of Development Economics.
Panizza, Ugo, Federico Sturzenegger, and Jeromin Zettelmeyer (2009), “The Economics and Law of Sovereign Debt and Default”, Journal of Economic Literature, 47:651-98.
Rose, Andrew (2005), “One Reason Countries Pay their Debts: Renegotiation and International Trade”, Journal of Development Economics, 77:189-206.
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