BIS Economists on "The Future of Public Debt"
Public debt and spending has become a particularly hot topic recently. The
key driver is a ballooning of fiscal deficits on the back of the crisis.
Governments around the world have transferred troubled assets from the private
sector to the public sector in order to prevent a major meltdown, they have also
taken large moves to stimulate demand. But this has worsened existing
vulnerabilities in terms of fiscal
sustainability. Hot spots have flared up like Greece and Dubai. The worse
may still be yet to come.
In these times it is prudent to soak up new information and insights to position
yourself to not only avoid loss but, if possible, make gains. This is a review
of a BIS (Bank for International Settlements) conference paper entitled "The
Future of Public Debt: Prospects and Implications", by Stephen G
Cecchetti, M S Mohanty and Fabrizio Zampolli. This new resource should provide
some insights and warnings about the future of government balances and debt
positions for investors and strategists. The paper can be found here.
There are a few good charts and tables in the paper which outline current and
projected positions under various scenarios e.g. interest expense as a fraction
of GDP, inflation expectations, industrial economies' gross public debt and
primary fiscal balances, projected population structure and age related
expenditure, CDS spread regressions against various fiscal indicators. I've
taken two visuals from the report to discuss in this review:
The
first one shows projected public debt to GDP, the red dotted line is the
baseline scenario, green is a small gradual adjustment, and blue is a small
gradual adjustment with age-related spending held constant. There are charts
like this for 12 countries, I picked out these two in particular because they're
traditionally seen as solid and safe countries/markets. But if you look at the
UK in particular, if things do indeed unfold like this there will be
implications (mention these soon), and remember in markets things tend to get
priced in earlier than expected...
It's also worth noting that they found in studying CDS market data that CDS
(default risk) spreads were reliably correlated with debt to GDP ratios (whereas
previous studies, prior to CDS data coming available, had identified that
"For each percentage point of additional public debt, researchers estimate
a risk premium increase of between 1.6 and 1.2 basis points.").
I
also thought the above table would be interesting to include as it shows the
magnitude of just how hard it will be to solve the problem in the near term. The
standouts are the UK, Japan, and Ireland - who would each need to run primary
balance surpluses of at least 10% over the next 5 years. Not only would this be
politically difficult to do, but it would also adversely impact economic growth
(as decreased spending and higher taxes obviously would have the reverse impact
of stimulus measures).
But then who would expect the politicians to take the hard road? It's
interesting to see their discussion of issues around fiscal challenges and
monetary policy: "two channels through
which unstable debt dynamics could lead to higher inflation – direct debt
monetisation and the temptation to reduce the real value of government debt
through higher inflation." It seems to me that there is a non-zero
probability risk of this sort of 'approach' going on at some point.
The other key risks or warnings they discuss, to briefly mention, include:
"In the aftermath of the financial
crisis, the path of future output is likely to be permanently below where we
thought it would be just several years ago. As a result, government revenues
will be lower and expenditures higher, making consolidation even more difficult.
But, unless action is taken to place fiscal policy on a sustainable footing,
these costs could easily rise sharply and suddenly."
"large public debts have significant
financial and real consequences. The recent sharp rise in risk premia on
long-term bonds issued by several industrial countries suggests that markets no
longer consider sovereign debt low-risk."
"the risk that persistently high levels
of public debt will drive down capital accumulation, productivity growth and
long-term potential growth potential."
Summary
It's well worth reading the entire paper, as a lot of detail is missed in this
brief review - but hinted at. A key theme of the paper is that prior to the
crisis a lot of industrialized nations faced existing structural deficit
problems such as the future liability of unfunded aging population related
expenses (e.g. pensions, rising health care costs etc). Of course when you add
crises to the mix - which tend to increase government deficits and debt (as
noted in a study they cited) - the existing problems of structural imbalances
only become harder to deal with.
As we're seeing some of the potential problems unfold in places like Greece, it
is therefore necessary to be vigilantly mindful of trends in government spending
to set intelligent investment strategy. At the end of the day as an individual
you're probably powerless to alter the course of government policy, but you can
and should alter the course of your own personal policies...
Source:
"The Future of Public Debt: Prospects and Implications" http://www.bis.org/publ/othp09.pdf?noframes=1
Bank for International Settlements http://www.bis.org
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/bisfiscal.html
About
| Econ Grapher is all about insightful and innovative analysis of economic and financial market data... |
Sponsors
If you're an investor who is considering trading in the $3 trillion a day in forex market, consider opening a forex demo account to test your skills.
New to Forex? Try a free forex software and learn the different types of currency movements.
