Oil & Debt Windfalls and Fiscal Dynamics in Bolivia
Author(s) -
Marcelo Catena,
Fernando Navajas
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.904218
Subject(s) - debt , economics , financial system , monetary economics , finance
During 2004-06 Bolivia experienced a five-fold increase in oil revenues due to tax/contractual innovations, higher prices and larger volumes at the same time that a multi-lateral debt reduction initiative trimmed roughly one third of the public external debt. The political economy setting of this environment entails a new hydrocarbons law that automatically decentralize expenditures to local gov- ernments and nationalization of the oil industry. We model fiscal dynamics in Bolivia in an stochastic framework and find that the new status-quo will generate double reversions of primary surplus and a public debt path that may fall short of being pleasant in the presence of unfettered fiscal spending and/or decline in international energy prices and gas demand from its neighbors. Even though it is difficult to asses the underlying fiscal policy reaction function to future devel- opments in Bolivia, we conclude that governance of the process of allocation and distribution of the oil rent is essential to the short to medium term sustainability of the new Bolivian model. JEL codes: E62, O23, Q43.
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