Title: Sustainable External Debt Management
1Sustainable External Debt Management
- Presented by
- Dr Tarun Das
- Economic Adviser
- Ministry of Finance
2 Contents
- 1. Definition of external debt
- 2. Conceptual issues
- 3. Different Types of Risk
- 4. Measures for Risk Management
- 5. Sustainability Indicators
- 6. World Bank Classification of Ext debt
31.1 Definition of external debt
- Gross external debt, at any time, is the
amount of disbursed and outstanding contractual
liabilities of residents of a country to
non-residents to repay the principal with or
without interest, or to pay interest with or
without principal. - Gross external debt
- Contractual obligation
- Disbursed and outstanding
- Principal with or without interest
- Interest with or without principal
- Concept of residency not nationality
- Current not contingent
41.2 Definition of external debt- Other Issues
- Valuation of external debt
- Present value of debt
- Short-term debt original and residual maturity
- Interest costs- actual / accrued
- Foreign and domestic currency
- Traded and unlisted securities
- Govt and non-govt( monetary authority, banks,
others)
52 Conceptual Issueson Sustainable Debt
- Debt Sustainability and Fiscal Deficit
- Debt Sustainability and Current Account Deficit
- Liquidity versus Solvency
- Economy wide models
- Asset Liability framework
- Debt sustainability indicators
-
63.1 External Debt Management and Risk Management
- A government should manage its debt in order to
raise the required amount of resources subject to
the lowest possible medium/long term cost and
consistent with a prudent degree of risk - Poor debt management poses risks for both the
public and private sectors - Risks include fiscal crisis change in
creditworthiness and insolvency (debt
distress) economic crisis and instability
73.2 Transparency in Risk Management
- Debt management objectives should be clearly
defined and publicly disclosed - The measures of cost and risk that are adopted
should be explained - Objectives/preferences of policy
- Rules of the game (institutional and legal
framework)
83.3 Basic Principles of Risk Management
- The risks in the structure of government debt
should be carefully monitored and evaluated - Risks associated with foreign-currency and
short-term or floating rate debt - The risks should be mitigated to the extent
feasible - Modify the debt structure, taking into account
cost of doing so
9 3.4 Different types of risk
- Market-Based Risks
- Liquidity risk
- Interest rate risks
- Credit risk
- Currency risk
- Convertibility risk
- Budget/ Fiscal Risk
- Contingent liabilities
10 3.5 Different types of risk
- Country specific and Political risks
- a) appropriation of capital,
- b) nationalisation of companies,
- c) no repatriation of capital etc.
- d) no sovereign guarantee
- Operational Risks
- Control system failure risks
- Financial error risk
- Auditing/ Accounting/ Monitoring Risk
114.1 Debt Management Strategy
- Market risk management involves understanding
financial characteristics of revenue flows to
government and matching with liabilities with
similar characteristics as far as possible
(asset and liability management) - Not so feasible in countries without
well-developed debt markets - Credit risk management depends on diversification
- Rollover risk can be created by excessive
short-term or floating rate debt (high potential
impact) - Effective cash management is necessary for
effective risk management (e.g., payment arrears)
124.2 Risk Management Framework
- A risk management framework should help to
identify and manage the trade-offs between
expected cost and risk in the debt portfolio - Cost includes financial cost and potential cost
of real economic loss - Market risk is measured in terms of potential
increases in debt servicing costs associated with
changes in interest or exchange rates
134.3 Assessing Risk
- To assess risk conduct stress tests of the debt
portfolio based on economic and financial shocks - Simple scenario models Fund/Bank Debt
Sustainability Analysis (DSA) - Project future debt service costs over MT/LT
- List key risk indicators
- Summarize costs and risks of alternative
strategies
144.4 Management of liquidity risk
- (a) Monitor debt by residual maturity
- (b) Monitor exchequer cash balance and flows
- (c) Maintain certain minimum level of cash
balance - (d) Maintain access to short-term borrowing
- (e) But, fix limits for short-term debt
- (f) Pre-finance maturing debt
- (g) Do not negotiate for huge bullet loans
- (h) Smooth the maturity profile to avoid
bunching of debt services - (i) Develop liquidity benchmarks
154.5 Management of interest rate risk
- (a) Fix benchmark for ratio of fixed versus
floating rate debt - (b) Maintain ratio of short-term versus long-term
debt - (c) Use interest rate swaps
164.6 Management of credit risk
- (a) Have credit rating of various scrips
by international credit rating organizations such
as SPs, Moodys, JBR etc. - (b) Identify key factors that determine
credit-rating - (c) Develop a culture of co-operation and
consultation among different departments and with
credit rating organisations - (d) Set overall and individual counter-party
credit limits
174.7 Management of currency risk
- (a) Fix benchmark for the ratio of
domestic and external debt - (b) Fix ratios of short-term /long-term debt
- (c) Fix currency mix for external debt
- (d) Determine single currency and currency
pool debt - (e) Use currency swaps
- (f) Try to have natural hedge by linking
dominant currency of exports remittances to the
currency denomination of debt
184.8 Convertibility Risk
- (a) Have gradual and cautious approach towards
capital account convertibility. - (b) An orderly and sequenced manner in line with
strengthening domestic financial systems through
adequate prudential and supervisory regulations. - (c) Encourage initially non-debt creating
financial flows followed by long term capital
flows. - (d) Short term or volatile capital flows may be
liberalised only at the end of capital account
convertibility.
194.9 Budget Risk
- (a) Enact a Fiscal Responsibility Act.
- (b) Put limits on debt outstanding and annual
borrowing as a percentage of GNP or GDP - (c ) Use government guarantees and other
contingent liabilities (such as insurance and
pensions etc,) judiciously and sparingly. - (d) Fix limits on contingent liabilities
- (e) Fix targets on fiscal deficit, primary
deficit - (f) Fix limits on short term borrowing
- (g) Monitor debt service payments
20 4.10 Operational Risk
- (a) Have stable and sound macro-economic
policies - (b) Have co-ordination among monetary and
fiscal authorities - (c) Allow independence and transparency
of different offices (such as front, back, middle
and head offices) dealing with public debt - (d) Strengthen capability of different
offices -
21 5.1 Solvency Ratio
- (a) Interest service ratio interest payments /
XGS ratio - (b) External debt / GDP ratio
- (c) External debt / exports ratio
- (d) External debt / revenue ratio
- (e) PV of debt services/ GDP ratio
- (f) PV of debt services / XGS ratio
- (g) PV of debt services / revenue ratio
22 5.2 Liquidity monitoring ratio
- (a) Basic debt service ratio- Ratio of debt
services on long term debt to XGS ratio - (b) Cash-flow ratio for total debt or the total
debt service ratio (i.e. total debt services to
XGS ratio - (c) Interest payments to reserves ratio.
- (d) Ratio of short-term debt to exports of
goods and services - (e) Import cover ratio- Ratio of total imports
to total foreign exchange reserves. - (f) Reserves to short-term debt ratio
- (g) Short-term debt to total debt ratio
23 5.3 Debt Burden Ratio
- (a) Total external debt to GDP (GNP) ratio
- (b) Total external debt to XGS ratio
- (c) Debt services to GDP (GNP) ratio
- (d) Total public debt to revenue ratio
- (e) Ratio of concessional debt to total debt
24 5.4 Debt structure indicators
- (a) Rollover ratio- ratio of amortization
(i.e. repayments of principal) to total
disbursements - (b) Ratio of interest payments to total debt
services - (c) Ratio of short-term debt to total debt
25 5.5 Public sector indicators
- (a) Public sector debt to total external debt
- (b) Public sector debt services to exports
ratio - (c) Public sector debt to GDP ratio
- (d) Public sector debt to revenue ratio
- (e) Average maturity of non-concessional
debt - (f) Foreign currency debt over total debt
26 5.6 Financial sector indicators
- (a) Open foreign exchange position-
Foreign currency assets minus liabilities plus
long term position in foreign currency stemming
from off-balance sheet transactions - (b) Foreign currency maturity mismatch
- (c) Ratio of foreign currency loans for real
estate to total debt - (d) External sector related contingent
liabilities - (e) Trends of share market prices
- (f) GDRs and Foreign cur conv bonds issued
- (g) Inflows of FDI and portfolio investment
27 5.7 corporate sector indicators
- (a) Leverage (debt/ equity ratio)- Normal
value of debt over equity - (b) Interest to cash flow ratio
- (c) Short-term debt to total debt
- (d) Return on assets
- (e) Exports to total output ratio
- (f) Net foreign currency cash flow
- (g) Net foreign currency debt over equity
285.8 Dynamic ratios
- (a) Average interest rate/ growth rate of
exports - (b) Average interest rate/ growth rate of GDP
- (c) Average interest rate/ growth rate of
revenue - (d) Change of PV of debt service/ change of
exports - (e) Change of PV of debt service/ change of
GDP - (f) Change of PV of debt service/ change of
revenue
295.9 Standard Stress Tests in the DSA
- Real GDP growth baseline 1 SD
- Export value growth baseline 1 SD
- GDP deflator baseline 1 SD
- Net non-debt creating flows baseline 1 SD
- Primary balance baseline 1 SD
- One-time major nominal or real depreciation
- Combinations (with ½ SD shocks, e.g.)
305.10 Identifying Debt Distress Episodes
- Debt distress indicated by recourse to any of
three forms of exceptional finance - Arrears Years in which principal and interest
arrears to all creditors is in excess of 5 of
total debt outstanding - Paris Club Relief Year of initial Paris Club
agreement, plus two subsequent years - Non-Concessional IMF Balance of Payments Support
Years in which Standby Arrangement or Extended
Fund Facility are in effect, commitments greater
than 50 of quota. Normal times are
non-overlapping periods of five years in which no
indicators of debt distress are observed
315.11 Determinants of Debt Distress
- Traditional Debt Indicators
- Present value of debt/exports, debt
service/exports - Debt service/current revenues, debt
service/reserves - Policy
- CPIA
- KKZ indices of institutional quality (single
cross-section) - Shocks
- Real GDP growth
- Real depreciations
- Income effect of changes in terms of trade
325.12 Implications for Lending Strategies of
Multilateral Concessional Lenders
- Substantial value-added in looking at role of
institutions/policies and shocks in addition to
traditional debt burden indicators when assessing
probability of debt distress - Using a common debt-burden threshold to assess
sustainability for all countries is unlikely to
be appropriate strong tradeoffs between quality
of institutions/policies and sustainable level of
debt
33 5.13 Indicative Policy-Dependent Debt and
Debt-Service Thresholds ()
345.14 Debt Distress Classification
- Low riskall indicators well below thresholds
- Moderate riskbaseline ok, but scenarios/shocks
near thresholds - High riskbaseline in breach over projection
period - In debt distresscurrent breach that is
sustained/significant
35 - Thank you
- Have a Good Day