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Sovereign debt and multiple equilibria
Steinar Holden Department of Economics, UiO ECON 4325 3 May 2013
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Lower interest rates for EMU countries in 2099
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But not in 2011 – what had happened?
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Countries without national central bank are more vulnerable for debt crises
Estimate – percent of GDP Budget balance Primary balance Gross debt Net debt Great Britain -8.8 -5.6 81 73 Spain -6.1 -4.4 67 56 Kilde: IMF Fiscal Monitor September 2011 In spite of this, Great Britain has been borrowing at 2.5 % interest rate, and Spain at over 5%
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Debt in ”foreign currency” – without national central bank
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Total financing needs 2012 maturing debt green, budget deficit blue
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Two equilibria Good equilibrium Bad equilibrium
The market expects the debt to be paid The interest rate is low, and the debt can be paid Bad equilibrium The market fears that the debt will not be paid The interest rate becomes so high that debt is not paid Self fullfilling expectations can give rise to a liquidity crisis => vast costs The central bank can buy government bonds Bad equilibrium can be avoided
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Central banks buy govt debt
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Fiscal policy and the financial crisis
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The Walter’s effect – monetary policy in a monetary union
The same nominal interest rate prevails throughout the EMU A country with a booming economy will have higher wage and price growth Lower real interest rate will stimulate the boom A country in a downturn will have lower wage and price growth Higher real interest rate will amplify the downturn Unavoidable destabilizing mechanism
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Trade balance in the euro area
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Increasing public debt in advanced economies
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