Publication series : IMF Staff Position Notes
Author: Mr. Jun Il Kim Mr. Atish R. Ghosh Mahvash Saeed Qureshi Mr. Jonathan David Ostry
Publisher: INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND
Publication year: 2010
E-ISBN: 9781589069848
P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781455228010
Subject: F811.0 Policy
Language: ENG
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Description
In this note, the authors reexamine the issue of debt sustainability in a large group of advanced economies. Their hypothesis is that, when debt is in a moderate range, its dynamics are sustainable in the sense that increases in debt elicit sufficient increases in primary fiscal balances to stabilize the debt-to-GDP ratio. At high debt levels, however, the dynamics may turn unstable, and the debt ratio may not converge to a finite level. Such a framework allows the authors to define a debt limit that is consistent with a countrys historical track record of adjustment in the sense that, without an extraordinary fiscal effort, any debt increment beyond this limit would cause debt to increase without bound. This debt limit is not an absolute and immutable barrier, however, but rather defines a critical point above which a countrys normal fiscal response to rising debt becomes insufficient to maintain debt sustainability. Nor should this debt limit be interpreted as being in any sense the optimal level of public debt. Indeed, since this limit delineates the point at which fiscal solvency is called into questionand the analysis abstracts entirely from liquidity/rollover riskprudence dictates that countries will typically want to be well below their debt limit. Given a countrys normal pattern of adjustment, fiscal space is then simply the difference between its debt limit and its current level of debt.