VoxEU Column Taxation

Sovereign debt, government myopia, and the financial sector

Why do governments repay external borrowing? This column argues that myopic governments seeking popularity do not default when they are poor because they would lose access to debt markets and be forced to reduce spending. And they do not default when rich because of the adverse consequences to the domestic financial sector. This explains why governments continue servicing debt when default is beneficial for the country.

Why do governments repay external sovereign borrowing? Models where countries service their external debt for fear of being excluded from capital markets for a sustained period (or some other form of harsh punishment such as trade sanctions or invasion) seem very persuasive, yet are at odds with the fact that defaulters seem to be able to return to borrowing in international capital markets after a short while. With sovereign debt in industrial countries at extremely high levels, understanding why sovereigns repay foreign creditors, and what their debt capacity might be, is an important concern for policymakers and investors around the world.

A theory of sovereign-debt repayment

A number of recent papers offer a persuasive explanation of why rich industrial countries service their debt without being subject to coordinated punishment. As a country becomes more developed and moves to issuing debt in its own currency, more and more of the debt is held by domestic financial institutions, or is critical to facilitating domestic financial transactions. Default on domestic bond holdings now automatically hurts domestic activity by rendering domestic banks insolvent or reducing activity in financial markets (see Bolton and Jeanne 2011 or Gennaioli et al 2011). If the government cannot default selectively on foreign holders of its debt only, either because it does not know who owns what, or it cannot track sales by foreigners to domestics (see Guembel and Sussman 2009 and Broner et al 2010 for rationales), then it has a strong incentive to avoid default and make net debt repayments to all, including foreign holders of its debt.

What is less clear is why an emerging market or a poor country that has a relatively underdeveloped financial sector, and hence little direct costs of default, would be willing to service its debt. Government short- termism may explain this. Short-horizon governments do not care about a growing accumulation of debt that has to be serviced – they can pass it on to the successor government – but they do care about current cash flows. So long as cash inflows from new borrowing exceed old debt service, they are willing to continue servicing the debt because it provides net new resources. Default would only shut off the money spigot, as renegotiations drag on, for much of the duration of their remaining expected time in government.

Thus we have a simple rationale for why developing countries may be able to borrow despite the absence of any visible mode of punishment other than a temporary suspension of lending; lenders anticipate the developing country will become rich, will be subject then to higher domestic costs of defaulting, and will eventually service its accumulated debt. In the meantime, the country’s short-horizon government is unlikely to be worried about debt accumulation, so long as lenders are willing to lend it enough to roll over its old debts plus a little more. Knowing this, creditors are willing to lend to it today.

Key in this narrative, and a central focus of our analysis, are the policies that a developing country government has to follow to convince creditors that it, and future governments, will not default. To ensure that the country’s debt capacity grows, it has to raise the future government’s ability to pay (that is, ensure the future government has enough revenues) as well as raise its willingness to pay (that is, ensure the future penalties to default outweigh the benefits of not paying). The need to tap debt markets for current spending thus gives even the myopic government of a developing country a stake in increasing debt capacity. The policies that it follows will, however, potentially reduce the country’s growth as well as increase its exposure to risk.

Interestingly, as the rate at which a government discounts the future falls, ie becomes less myopic, its willingness to default on legacy debt increases. The long-horizon government internalises the future cost of paying back new borrowing, as well as the distortions that stem from policies required to expand debt capacity. This makes borrowing less attractive, and since for a developing country government the ability to borrow more is the only reason to service legacy debt, the long-horizon developing country government has more incentive to default (or less capacity to borrow in the first place). Similarly, developing countries with a more productive technology may also have lower debt capacity because the distortionary taxation needed to sustain access to debt markets will be more costly for such countries.

Implications

Because the costs of default are sizeable in our model only when the country becomes rich, the nature of developing country defaults and rich country defaults are likely to be very different. Developing countries are more likely to default when revenue shortfalls (crop failures or a fall in export prices) or increases in expenditure (natural disaster or a rise in import prices) lead to a buildup in debt that can imply net debt outflows for some time. The reason for default is not that the country cannot pay but that the time path of prospective payments does not make it worthwhile for the current government to maintain access to debt markets. For rich countries, though, the direct cost of default is substantial, and default looms only when the country simply does not have the political and economic ability to raise the revenues needed to repay debt.

The ongoing sovereign crisis in Europe raises some fundamental issues that our model can speak to. For instance, our model explains why some governments keep current on their debt, even when most market participants suggest it would be better for them to default. So long as the Eurozone and multilateral institutions are willing to provide funding to tide the country over, myopic governments really see no benefit in default, no matter how much debt accumulates. That does not, however, mean that servicing debt or taking actions that maintain or expand long-term debt capacity (such as creating greater entanglements between domestic banks and domestic government debt) are optimal.

For rich countries, the direct cost of default is substantial, and default looms only when the country simply does not have the political and economic ability to raise the revenues needed to repay debt – as, for example, in the case of Greece. When rich countries are in danger of default, outside agencies that lend them more without helping these countries expand productivity and growth are only postponing the inevitable messy restructuring. Rich country defaults are more likely to be solvency defaults rather than liquidity defaults, and a simple rescheduling of debt without significant haircuts to face value is unlikely to help the country regain access to private markets.

Another interesting development in the ongoing sovereign-debt crisis in Europe is the extreme degree of dependence of the health of a country’s banking sector on the health of the government, and vice versa. Acharya et al (2010) document that the 91 European banks stress-tested in 2010 held sovereign bonds on average up to a sixth of their risk-weighted assets, and that within these sovereign bond holdings, there is a ‘home bias’ in that banks held substantial portion in own-government bonds (see Figure 1). Indeed, the home bias in sovereign bond holdings was the highest for countries with the greatest risk of government debt default, suggesting they are positively correlated; Countries that are at greater risk of default also have banks whose portfolios are stuffed with own-government debt.

Figure 1. The share of sovereign bonds held by banks in the form of the bonds issued by the home government

Source: European stress test data released in June 2010

One explanation is that banks are buyers of last resort (perhaps with some arm-twisting) for their government’s debt, and this is why risky countries, who find no other takers, stuff their banks with their paper. An alternative explanation (see Diamond and Rajan 2011) is that banks have a natural advantage in loading up on risks that will materialise when they themselves are likely to be in default. But a third, not mutually exclusive, explanation is ours – that countries have to prove to new bondholders their enduring resolve to service their foreign debt, and this is best done by making the costs of default on domestic debt prohibitively costly.

In this vein, consider the recent proposal of the Eurozone think tank, Bruegel, for Eurozone sovereigns to issue two kinds of debt, one (blue bond) that is guaranteed by all Eurozone countries and will be held by domestic banks, and another (red bond) that is the responsibility of the issuing country only and which domestic banks will be prohibited from holding. Our model points out that there is very little reason for a country to service the red bonds. These will not be held by key domestic financial institutions, and therefore will not cause many ripples if they are defaulted on. This will make it hard for a country to borrow sizeable amounts through red bond issuances, which may indeed be the subtle intent of the proposal.

References

Acharya, Viral V, Itamar Drechsler and Philipp Schnabl (2010), “A Pyrrhic Victory? – Bank Bailouts and Sovereign Credit Risk”, Working Paper, NYU Stern.

Acharya, Viral V and Raghuram Rajan (2011), “Sovereign Debt, Government Myopia and the Financial Sector”, CEPR Discussion Paper 8668.

Bolton, Patrick, and Olivier Jeanne (2011), “Sovereign default and bank fragility in financially integrated economies”, CEPR Discussion Paper 8358.

Broner, Fernando, Alberto Martin and Jaume Ventura, 2010, Sovereign risk and secondary markets, American Economic Review 100, 1523-1555.

Diamond, Douglas and Raghuram G Rajan, 2011, Fear of Fire Sales and the Credit Freeze, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 126(2), 557-591.

Gennaioli,  Nicola, Alberto  Martin,  and  Stefano  Rossi (2011) “Sovereign Defaults, Domestic Banks, and Financial Institutions.”CEPR Discussion Paper 7955.

Guembel, Alexander, and Oren Sussman, 2009, Sovereign debt without default penalties, Review of Economic Studies 76, 1297-3120.

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