Title: Sovereign Debt, Debt Crisis, and Debt Resolution
1Sovereign Debt, Debt Crisis,and Debt Resolution
- Piroska M. Nagy
- EBRD
- VIII Summer School of the
- University of the Basque Country (UPV), San
Sebastián, Spain - July 26-30, 2004
2Presentation Overview
- Historic Overview of Sovereign Debt and Default
- Why Sovereign Debt Exists?
- Reasons for Debt Crisis
- Debt Resolutions, including HIPC
- Hot Issues Today
3Section One
- Historical overview
- Why Sovereign Debt Exists?
- Reasons for Debt Crisis
- Debt Resolutions, including HIPC
- Hot Issues Today
Historic Overview
4Public (sovereign) debt is quite high and rising
in emerging market economies
5Is this a new phenomenon? a historic overview
- Sovereign debt is as old as sovereigns
themselves, and sovereign default exists since
sovereign debt exists. First recorded sovereign
debt default goes back to the fourth century BC,
when 10 out of 13 Greek municipalities defaulted
on loans to the Delos temple - Most early defaults were resolved through
currency debasement, ie., inflation/devaluation.
Debt restructuring in earnest started only in the
19th century
6Historic overview
- Hundreds of defaults since the beginning of the
19th century, linked to 2 types of events - Political-social upheaval, eg, WW I Turkey,
Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria WW II Italy, Turkey,
Japan Comminist takeover Russia (1917) China
(1949) Czechslovakia (1952), Cuba (1960). I
interestingly, this is the less typical reason. - Most defaults have related to boom-bust cycles in
international capital flows
7Historic overview
- According to Suter, Linder, and Morton, since
early 1800s, there have been 7 lending booms
with capital inflows - The 1820-30s new Latin America, and US, Spain
and Portugal - 1860-70s LatAm, Us, Europe, Ottoman Empire,
Egypt - 1880s US, Australia, LatAm
- Before WW I Canada, Australia, Russia, some
LatAm, Ottoman Empire, Bulgaria - 1920s Germany, Japan, Canada, some LatAm
- 1970s LatAm, Spain, Yugoslavia, Romania, Poland,
Africa - 1990s LatAm, Asia, former Communist countries in
Europe -
8 and these can be associated with 7 waves of
sovereign defaults
9Historic overview
- All lending booms ended in bust, in which some
countries defaulted or rescheduled their debt. 3
main triggers - TOT deterioration
- Shock in creditor country recession, interest
rate rise - Shock in debtor countries
- Lending booms were financed in large part by
capital inflows - 19th century UK, France
- Early 20th century UK, France, Germany, the
Netherlands, and US - Interwar period UK and US
- Second half of 20th century US, Western Europe,
Japan
10Emerging historical facts
- Latin America is a serial defaulter
- Some countries never defaulted (US, Canada,
Australia, SA) few Asian or Arab countries have - Some countries graduate Western Europe,
Colombia since the 1930s - The last boom-bust (1996-2003)resulted in
historically very few defaults - Many could not have access after the 1980s
- Much higher share of private borrowing during
boom (resulting in non-not sovereign debt) Asia - IMF played a much stronger role in prevention
with large packages (Mexico, Brazil, Turkey)
11Section Two
- Historic Overview
-
- Reasons for Debt Crisis
- Debt Resolutions, including HPIC
- Hot Issues Today
Why Sovereign Debt Exists?
12Why sovereign debt exist?
- There are many defaults, and creditors have no
direct control over/cannot liquidate the
sovereign debtors assets. So why does the
private sector lend to sovereigns at all? - Three reasons
- It is probably not bad business over the long
term (good and bad times taken together) - There is some enforcement mechanism
- Exit illusion by individual market participants
13Why Sovereign Debt Exist?
- 1. Not bad business over the long term for
creditors (necessarily difficult calculation) - Contrary to belief, creditors not harmed most
of the time. Studies consistently indicate that
the long-term premium of EM debt relative to
sovereign debt in the creditors country is small
but positive. In the more recent period (late
90s), except for Argentina, investor returns have
been very high owing to high risk premia in good
times
14Why Sovereign Debt Exist?
- 2. There is some enforcement/incentive
mechanism fear of difficult return to markets
worries about other sovereigns retaliation
(trade or else) reputational risks - 3. Exit illusion of market participants of not
being the last remaining standing.
15Section Three
- Historic Overview
- Why Sovereign Debt Exists?
- Reasons for Sovereign Debt Crises
- Debt Resolutions, including HIPC
- Hot Issues Today
Reasons for Sovereign Debt Crisis
16Causes of EM debt crisis
- EM debt structure is biased towards short term,
forex dominated debt (original sin, etc) both
dangerous. Revenue base is weaker than in
Advanced economies. Results are - less debt tolerance
- more vulnerability
- Debt runs liquidity crisis triggered by
self-fulfilling runs on debt
17Causes of EM debt crisis
EM debt crisis is often a currency crisis -
self-fulfilling dynamics
- Default reduces output, leading to currency
depreciation - Depreciation leads to default on foreign debt and
inflation. (May also lead to private sector
insolvency as well as banking sector crisis) - This leads to currency crisis, which in turn
induces government and possibly private sector
insolvency
18Causes of EM debt crisis
- Incentives to over-borrow
- International moral hazard problem (countries
expect to be bailed out by IFIs). Note Argentina
has proven that such moral hazard arguments were
exaggerated - Domestic moral hazard Perottis middle class tax
payer finances eventually the excessive spending
plans of rich/poor, financed by foreign borrowing - Triggers of domestic or external shocks (see
earlier historic overview) -
19What Governments Do When Faced with High Debt?
- In principle, 5 ways out
- Adjust fiscal policy to run primary surpluses
(preferably via expenditure cuts) that allow for
debt reduction - Grow it out
- Inflate it away
- Sell assets
- Default
20What Governments Do When Faced with High Debt?
- The IMF (2003) looked at the largest debt-stock
reduction episodes in 1970-2002 to see what
governments have actually done - 65 Default
- Non-defaulters a combination of high growth and
primary surplus owing to expenditure reduction as
well as exchange rate appreciation reducing
forex-denominated debt (impact of transition
economies)
21Section Four
- Historic Overview
- Why Sovereign Debt Exists?
- Reasons for Sovereign Debt Crises
- Debt Resolutions
- Hot Issues Today
Debt Resolutions, including HIPC
22Debt Resolution
- Negotiation process creditor coordination
- Terms of settlement
- Involvement of any official party (government,
IMF)
23Debt Resolution - Creditor coordination
- Creditor coordination
- Early era ad hoc
- New era marked by establishment of the British
Corporation of Foreign Bondholders (CFB) (1868 to
the 1950s), the most successful creditor
association ever. - Represented the entire British financial sector
bondholders. - Formal structure (secretariat etc)
- Mandate twofold information on debtor and
creditor coordination at negotiation and
settlement. - Structure reflected concentrated creditor group
rel. few bondholders in 5-6 countries - Enforcement no access to London market
- Excellent record
24Debt Resolution Creditor Coordination
-
- 1970-80s New market structure with loans by few
hundred commercial banks. New institution Bank
Advisory Committee (e.g. London Club),
consisting of 10-15 key banks, representing
hundreds of creditors. - 1998-2003 resembling the early era of ad hoc
approach, with no formal representation of large
number of bondholders (except in Argentina with
delay January 2004) - Note a new debtor dominance approach
take-it-or-leave-it offer to exchange existing
bonds for new ones with lower NPV. Key (i)
design an attractive enough offer to enlist wide
participation in view of alternatives (ii)
usually contingent on acceptance by majority
(80-90).
25Debt Resolution Terms of Agreement
- First bond era 1800 1960s a mixture of five
elements - Capitalization of interest
- Moratorium on payment or maturity extension
- In some cases write-off of interest or even debt
- In some cases new loans for continued interest
payments - Debt-equity swaps (land, rail road) or mortgaging
customs revenues
26Debt Resolution Terms of Agreement
- 1970s-80s trying to prevent outright default via
negotiations before - First trying to using full refinancing (1970s),
then mix of refinancing and rescheduling of
principal (Poland 1982, Mexico 1984) - MYRAS (multi-year rescheduling)
- Brady Plan Significant NPV reduction with
official enhancements, on the basis of a menu
(choice among par bonds, discount bonds,
debt-equity swaps, cash buy-backs)
27Debt Resolution Terms of Agreement
- 1998-2004 reduced-form Brady Plan
- Menu options, although mostly reduced to 2
choices - No debt-equity conversion
- Significant NPV reduction
- Argentina an exception
- - largest haircut ever (65)
- - without IFI participation
- - largest non-acceptance (to date) 24
- - one of the longest period until offer was
made
28Debt Resolution Role of Official Sector
(Government, IFIs)
- Before WW II arms-length approach by governments
(some pressure) - After WW II increased official intervention via
- direct government involvement (US Treasury- Brady
Plan 1989, 1994 Mexico Bank of England Zaire
1976) - IFI IMF direct involvement critical in the
1980s, but more hands-off in 1998-2004, with now
lending into arrears.
29HIPC as Debt Resolution Instrument
- Objective Reduce debt overhang and earmark
freed-up resources for poverty reduction in the
poorest countries (per capita lt US800) - Special debt structure Most debt to official
creditors (over 90), chiefly to IFIs / World
Bank (more than half) - In principle, mandatory for official creditors
(most of the time) and persuasion for private
ones
30HIPC as Debt Resolution Instrument
- Record 1996 2005
- US 32 billion debt relief committed in 2004 NPV
terms. Total cost for all eligible countries
US58 billion - 27 beneficiary countries of which 18 permanent
reduction. - Drop in debt stock and debt service almost halved
- Increased poverty-reduction spending from 6½ of
GDP in 1999 to 8 in 2004, with some increase in
transparency - More local ownership and domestic control
- Good initial market reaction (rating agencies
not default but voluntary debt restructuring)
31HIPC as Debt Resolution Instrument
- Problems
- Underfinanced
- Millennium objectives of halving poverty by 2025
will not be attained - Overly complex and costly to monitor
- Does not address one of the reasons for high IFI
debt in the first place have IFI/World Bank
operations changed? After-completion
point debt is on the rise - No clear plan for after-HIPC market access
32HIPC as Debt Resolution Instrument
- Solutions?
- Simplify it
- Promote HIPC as debt reduction (not simply
poverty reducing) - Use a market-based approach to satisfy future
financing needs. Give incentives to good
performers to graduate from IFI assistance and
ease their access to markets - Grants for the poorest only (this is not in vague
however) - Key problems to Africas growth still to be
tackled (i) political/ethnic governance (ii)
trade access to foster growth (some progress).
33Pressure is on the G-8 Live 8
34Is the new G-8 debt relief initiative the
solution?
- Objectives
- 100 debt relief on IDA, IMF, and AfDB debt for
countries reaching the completion point (18 now,
17 later) - Double aid for Africa (US50 billion) by 2010.
Use innovative instruments such as the IFF - Improve transparency governance at the
receiving end - But some key issues clearly remain (trade access
promoting market-based approaches to satisfy
future financing needs, etc).
35Section Five
- Historic Overview
- Why Sovereign Debt Exists?
- Reasons for Sovereign Debt Crisis
- Debt Resolutions, including HIPC
- Hot issues today
Hot Issues Today
36Hot Issues Today
- Advanced economies
- Short-term issue US fiscal imbalances,
indebtedness, and global macroeconomic imbalances - On the long run we are all ... debt (S P)
Pension and other old-age related government
liabilities pose a major threat to long-term
fiscal sustainability in the advanced world
37On the long run we are all ... debt
- Rising government debt (on unchanged policies)
- can lead to drastic downgrading
Italy
Maastricht crit.
38Hot Issues Today
- Emerging Markets
- Impact of US interest rate increases may be
significant, but EMs are better prepared for a
shock than before - Argentina-factor Has Argentina changed the rules
of the game for sovereign default therefore for
sovereign debt? Not the probability of default
(PD), but the loss-given-default (LGD) value - Impact of Basel II on capital inflows to EMs in
Basel IIs more risk-sensitive world, low-rated
sovereigns (particularly OECD members) may see a
reduction in capital and/or increase in spreads.
39Sovereign Debt, Debt Crisis,and Debt Resolution