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The liquidation of government debt
Author(s) -
Carmen Reinhart,
M. Belen Sbrancia
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
economic policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.579
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1468-0327
pISSN - 0266-4658
DOI - 10.1093/epolic/eiv003
Subject(s) - debt , financial repression , debt to gdp ratio , economics , restructuring , monetary economics , debt levels and flows , interest rate , debt restructuring , external debt , internal debt , government debt , inflation (cosmology) , recourse debt , financial system , finance , sovereign debt , physics , sovereignty , politics , law , political science , theoretical physics
Historically, periods of high indebtedness have been associated with a rising incidence of default or restructuring of public and private debts. A subtle type of debt restructuring takes the form of repression. Financial repression includes directed lending to government by captive domestic audiences (such as pension funds), explicit or implicit caps on interest rates, regulation of cross-border capital movements, and (generally) a tighter connection between government and banks. In the heavily regulated financial markets of the Bretton Woods system, several restrictions facilitated a sharp and rapid reduction in public debt/GDP ratios from the late 1940s to the 1970s. Low nominal interest rates help reduce debt servicing costs while a high incidence of negative real interest rates liquidates or erodes the real value of government debt. Thus, financial repression is most successful in liquidating debts when accompanied by a steady dose of inflation. Inflation need not take market participants entirely by surprise and, in effect, it need not be very high (by historic standards). For the advanced economies in our sample, real interest rates were negative roughly ½ of the time during 1945-1980. For the United States and the United Kingdom our estimates of the annual liquidation of debt via negative real interest rates amounted on average from 3 to 4 percent of GDP a year. For Australia and Italy, which recorded higher inflation rates, the liquidation effect was larger (around 5 percent per annum). We describe some of the regulatory measures and policy actions that characterized the heyday of the financial repression era.

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