Abstract
We study the sustainability of sovereign debt under the assumption of involuntary and costly default: governments do their utmost to avoid default, which reduces the resources available for debt service. We show that costly default tightens Blanchard’s g > r condition. We derive a formula for a government’s maximum sustainable debt (MSD), which depends on the mean and the volatility of the country’s growth rate, the government’s maximum primary surplus, the risk-free rate, and the fraction of resources available to the government in default. We compute MSD for 12 Eurozone countries and examine the role of the European Stability Mechanism in increasing MSD.
Keywords
Sovereign Debt; Default; Maximum Sustainable Debt;
JEL codes
- E62: Fiscal Policy
- F34: International Lending and Debt Problems
- H63: Debt • Debt Management • Sovereign Debt
Reference
Fabrice Collard, Michel Habib, Ugo Panizza, and Jean-Charles Rochet, “Sovereign Debt Sustainability with Involuntary Default”, TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1599, December 2024.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1599, December 2024