Working paper

Optimal Fiscal Rules and Macroprudential Policies with Sovereign Default Risk

Gerard Maideu-Morera

Abstract

The European Sovereign debt crises (2010-2012) showcased how excessive private leverage can threaten sovereign debt sustainability, making the existing fiscal rules targeting only public debt insufficient. In this paper, I study the optimal joint design of fiscal rules and macroprudential policies with sovereign default risk. I first consider a stylized two-period model of a small open economy where both the local government and a representative household borrow internationally. A central authority internal-izes externalities from sovereign default by the local government and designs fiscal rules and macroprudential policies. The model yields two insights: (i) it provides a novel rationale for macroprudential policies, and (ii) sovereign debt limits that are a function of the quantity of private debt (private-debt-dependent fiscal rules) can im-plement the optimal allocation. Then, I generalize these results to a multiperiod model with heterogeneous households, aggregate risk, and a rich asset structure. Finally, I calibrate a quantitative version of the model to compute the private-debt-dependent fiscal rules and the size of the macroprudential wedges.

Keywords

Fiscal rules; macroprudential policy; sovereign default; endogenous borrowing constraints; economic unions;

JEL codes

  • F34: International Lending and Debt Problems
  • F41: Open Economy Macroeconomics
  • F45:
  • E44: Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy
  • G28: Government Policy and Regulation

Reference

Gerard Maideu-Morera, Optimal Fiscal Rules and Macroprudential Policies with Sovereign Default Risk, TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1534, May 2024.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1534, May 2024