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Capital Punishment? Financial Openness, Private Borrowers, and Fiscal Discipline in Developing Countries Mark S. Copelovitch University of Wisconsin David Andrew Singer MIT IPE Society Nov. 15, 2008
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Explaining Fiscal Discipline Puzzle: some LDC governments balance their budgets; others run large deficits – “Common pool resource” problem State of the literature: – Exclusive focus on institutions (e.g., Hallerberg and Marier; Persson and Tabellini; von Hagen; etc.) – Mostly OECD – How does financial openness matter? (“straitjacket” or “bonanza”?) – Interests?
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Financial openness and domestic interests Argument: impact of financial openness on fiscal behavior is conditional upon domestic interests Domestic “fiscal disciplinarians”: private external borrowers – Banks; some private firms – Varies across countries, time
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Private External Borrowers Why are they “fiscal disciplinarians”? – Private cost of capital depends (in part) on sovereign borrowing costs “Sovereign ceiling” – Sovereign borrowing costs increase with default risk – Private external borrowers want the government to have good credit
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Composition of Foreign Borrowing, All Developing Countries, 1970-2005 $ billion
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Private External Borrowing, Select Countries Private non-guaranteed debt, % of GDP
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Financial openness has a conditional impact on budget deficits When private external borrowing is extensive: – Financial openness leads to fiscal discipline, because private borrowers want to minimize borrowing costs When private external borrowing is minimal: – Financial openness is indeterminate Facilitates government borrowing (larger capital pool) International investors punish governments for deficits (Mosley 2003)
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Empirical Analysis Data: 49 countries, 1976-2004. (601 obs) DV: overall budget balance/GDP Explanatory variable: interaction of financial openness (“ KAOPEN ”) and private external borrowing/GDP Other variables: – Inflation, growth, (log) GDP, (log) GDP/c, total external debt/GDP, ER regime, liquid liabilities/GDP, political institutions (checks, PR, federalism, fractionalization) Model: OLS with LDV, country and year fixed effects
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Coefficient on Financial Openness at Different Levels of Private External Borrowing
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First Differences
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Caveats and Conclusions Tentative conclusion: financial openness triggers fiscal discipline from domestic groups that favor affordable foreign capital Bring interests back in to the study of government budgeting Robustness; alternative model specifications Case study evidence
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