by
Marcus Miller and Lei Zhang
Variables used are defined as follows:
Parameter Definition b Level of debt/capacity output - endogenous g
θ
Government expenditure/capacity output - endogenous
Tax revenue as a fraction of capacity output r
γ
π
Cost of debt service as a fraction of capacity output
Rate of capacity growth,
Rate of inflation
2
b
B
Debt sustainability and government expenditure b
0 b*
Bond Accumulation π = (π − π − πΎ)π + π − π
π = 0
A
0
A A
1
Tax take
A
2
E r-γ-π g*
B
θ g
3
From a point such as A
1
, where the sum of expenditure and interest charges (adjusted for growth and inflation) exceeds the tax base, debt will grow unsustainably unless some action is taken. Such action may include:
• reducing expenditure or raising tax rates;
• debt reduction via inflation or explicit repudiation;
• financial repression, i.e. lowering the rate of interest paid;
• increasing the growth rate
• a debt equity swap or some combination of the above.
4
Let the plan for fiscal consolidation be to adjust the structural deficit,
S, so as to hit a target of δ*, where S is defined as ππ + π − π .
Let this target be chosen to be consistent with a debt target of b*; so πΏ ∗ = (πΎ +π)π ∗
The baseline model can then be summarised in two equations:
FC π = −πΌ π − πΏ ∗ = −πΌ ππ + π − π − πΏ ∗ = −πΌ ππ + π − π ′
B A
π = (π − π − πΎ)π + π − π where π ′ = π + πΏ ∗ .
Or in matrix form: π
π
=
−πΌ −πΌπ
1 π − π − πΎ π π
+ πΌπ ′
−π
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b
B
Fiscal consolidation with capacity output: the baseline model
F r
π = 0 b*
A' A
Tax take
E g* r-γ-π
B
θ π = 0
F
θ'
δ* g
6
0.36
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
1.1
Different speeds of consolidation
α = 0.4
α = 0.5
α = 1
0.37
0.38
0.39
0.40
0.41
0.42
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b
B
Fiscal fatigue defines an upper debt limit
“Fiscal fatigue” of Barr et al.
b
F r
π = 0 b* g
A
A'
Tax take
E g* r-γ-π
B
θ π = 0
F
θ'
δ* g
8
Fiscal consolidation with endogenous income and taxation:
BB flatter to left of MM; equil shifts up FF.
π = π − π − γ π + π − π + π( π
0
− π) π
π
=
−∝ −πΌπ
1 − π π − π − πΎ π π
+ π πΌπ′
0
− π
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b
B
Fiscal stabilisation works, but with temporary recession
B′
F r
π = 0
Recession
M
No Recession
Higher debt with lower tax take
C b*
M g*
E
A r-γ-π
Tax take at capacity output
F
θ π = 0
B
θ′
δ* g
10
Simulation results which converge to full employment in the long-run
0.80
With endogenous taxes
0.75
Not cyclically adjusted
0.70
Baseline case
0.65
0.380
0.382
0.384
0.386
0.388
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b
B
F r
Fiscal consolidation – waiting and hoping
Regime switches
D
Temporary recession
M
No recession
π = 0
E'
A'
E
C
Tax take at capacity output
A b*
D
X r-γ-π g*
M B
θ π = 0
F
θ'
δ* g
12
Simulations during the period of waiting and hoping
0.34
With endogenous taxes
1.6
Baseline case
0.8
0.36
1.4
1.2
Not-cyclically adjusted
1.0
0.40
0.42
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b
B
Tightening fiscal policy to hit the debt target, b*
Recession
M
No Recession
B'
F
F' r b*
E'
Tax take at capacity output
E
D
E g
D
B' g*
M
θ
B F'
δ*
F
θ' g
14
Simulations showing the effect of the tightening of structural deficits
With endogenous taxes
0.90
0.85
0.80
0.75
Not cyclically adjusted
0.70
0.65
0.36
Baseline case
0.40
0.42
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b
Fiscal consolidation defeated by high interest rates
F r
B′ π = 0
π = 0
S
U
Explosive path of debt
E
A
U
θ
δ*
F
θ′
B′
S g
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b
F
B′ π
0
π = 0
S π = 0
Z b*
E
M
A
Z
Failed attempts to stabilise
S g*
M π − π − πΎ
1 − π
F
θ
δ*
θ′ g
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b
B
DeLong and Summers: stabilisation delays fiscal consolidation, with higher taxes to cover debt interest
M
D
π = 0
F r
C b** b*
A
EαΏ½
E
F r-γ-π g*
M B
θ π = 0
F
θ′ θ′′
δ* g
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Different types of stability bonds
Name
Euro-bonds
“Blue bonds”
“Elite” bonds
Debt retirement fund
Concept
Issue of common bonds to replace all debt
Issue of common bonds up to 60% of
GDP
Common bonds only for AAA rated countries
New entity that pools all debts above
60% of GDP, issues its own common bonds. Countries have a credible commitment to amortise the debt in a certain time frame
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BEFORE: Investors holds sovereign bonds - but are prone to switch
Private
Investors
Lucky
Sovereigns
“Flight to safety”
Unlucky sovereigns face high spreads
Unlucky
Sovereigns
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AFTER: Stability and growth fund pools sovereign debt - and diversifies types of bond
Private
Investors
Stability bonds
Stability and
Growth Fund
Lucky
Sovereigns
Growth bonds
Unlucky
Sovereigns
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Balance sheet of SPV
Assets
Sovereign bonds:
(a) Plain vanilla
(b) Growth and GDP-linked
Liabilities
Euro stability bonds
Equity base
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• Have used simple multiplier to capture private sector reaction to public sector consolidation.
• Far preferable explicitly to model private and public sector behaviour as they engage in a dance of deleveraging, but…
• Koo warns of balance sheet recession that will result.
• Is it true that credibility rules out state contingent policy?
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