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Risk, Uncertainty, and Autonomy: Financial Market Constraints in Developing Countries. Sarah Brooks & Layna Mosley Ohio State University & University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
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Risk, Uncertainty, and Autonomy: Financial Market Constraints in Developing Countries Sarah Brooks & Layna Mosley Ohio State University & University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Prepared for the 1st meeting of the International Political Economy Society, Princeton University, Nov. 17-18, 2006
Political Risk • Exposure to the possibility that political events will adversely affect the profitability of an investment (Bailey & Chang 1995: 542) • Especially problematic for developing countries • Less transparent to foreign investors • Uncertainty / incomplete information are central to the problem of political risk
Previous Research • Elections are a key source of political risk: • Uncertain outcomes • Incentives for opportunistic behavior, policy change • Associated with turbulence in currency, bond markets (Martinez & Santiso 2003; Reinhart 2002) • Both the outcome of the election and the possibility of policy discontinuity are considered sources of uncertainty (Jensen & Schmith 2005) • Uncertainty is said to be largely resolved following the election (Bernhard & Leblang 2002)
Political Risk v. Political Uncertainty • Difference between risk and uncertainty largely elided • Knight (1957): • Risk can be quantified, measured • Uncertainty is unmeasurable • Difference between risk and uncertainty has to do with the degree of knowledge about a situation • Important implications for market behavior, government autonomy
Risk and Uncertainty in International Bond Markets Sources of risk and uncertainty in sovereign debt markets: • Default risk • Ability to pay • Willingness to pay • Currency risk(including inflation) • Policy Stability (long-run value of asset)
Risk and Uncertainty in International Bond Markets • Information derived from institutional, ideological factors, and past policy behavior • Challengers to the incumbent often lack a past policy record • Elections thus increase uncertainty, even if outcome is predictable • Information frictions: little incentive to become fully informed (Calvo & Mendoza 2000)
Risk and Uncertainty in International Bond Markets • Investors can and do acquire information to reduce uncertainty about candidates, new incumbents • Partisan cues • Assimilate candidates into a group of similar situations for which probability of default can be calculated • Left/Right partisan archetypes • Right more committed to fiscal probity, willing to honor debt commitments • Left more likely to inflate economy, default
Risk and Uncertainty in International Bond Markets • Since 1990s, these archetypes have been less valid • Left governments adopting orthodox liberal policies • “Nixon in China”: e.g., Menem, Fujimori • Not universal: e.g., Kirschner, Morales, Chávez • Partisan cues – for the Left – thus are ambiguous • Elections do not fully resolve uncertainty about Left candidates’ willingness to honor sovereign debt commitments
Observable Implications • Bond markets should respond more negatively to Left candidates and new presidents than to those on the Right, all else being equal. • Time in office (opportunity to gain information about type) should reduce market premium for Left governments, but should not change assessments for the Right, all else being equal.
Empirical Analysis: Dependent Variable • Sovereign risk is captured through spreads: • Difference between yield on government bond and benchmark ‘risk-free’ U.S. Treasury bond • Higher spreads indicate negative market sentiment about a country’s economic and political risk (Eichengreen & Mody 1998) • J.P. Morgan’s EMBI Global Index • Foreign currency denominated debt instruments: isolates default risk; no currency risk • 33 ‘emerging market’ countries • 1993-2004
Empirical Analysis: Independent Variables • Partisanship of Executive • Years in Office • Partisanship * Years in Office
Empirical Analysis: Controls • Political Controls • Divided Government • Democracy • Presidential Election Year • Creditworthiness Indicators • Inflation (ln) • External balance • Debt/GDP Ratio • Debt Service/Export Ratio • Macroeconomic Controls • GDP (ln) • Growth (% per capita) • Trade exposure
Empirical Model ΔS = β0St-1 + β1Partisanship + β2YrsOffice + β3Partisan* YrsOffice + β4 Divided Govt + β5Democracy + β6Election Year + β[Creditworthiness] + β[Macroeconomy] + β7Time • Random effects cross-sectional, time-series estimation • Temporal dependence: AR-1 • Cross-sectional correlation: PCSE
Case Study: Brazil • 2002 Presidential election • Front-runner: Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (“Lula”) • Left-wing Worker’s Party • Earlier rhetoric of debt restructuring • Recent Argentine default • Risk of policy discontinuity • Previous elections followed by costly devaluation • Market response: • Wall Street firms paid close attention to domestic polls • Spreads jumped sharply
Case Study: Brazil 2002 • Market response unlikely to be due solely to changes in fundamentals or risk aversion • Debt, although rising, was considered manageable (Martinez & Santiso 2003: 371) • Brazil spreads diverged from EMBI Global Composite Index • Composite reflects broader risk appetite for emerging market debt
Case Study: Brazil 2002 • Efforts during the campaign to win confidence • All three candidates signed a Letter of Intent with IMF • Funds to be dispersed after the election • Lula’s “Letter to the Brazilian People” • Pledged to respect existing agreements with international institutions, companies • Laid out reform agenda
Case Study: Brazil • Lula in office: Confidence-enhancing measures • Maintained, deepened policies of previous government • Wall Street executive Henrique Meireles named President of the Central Bank • Increased the autonomy of the Central Bank • Reforms of social security, tax systems • Primary surplus above IMF target • Market response: • Sharp decline in spreads • Currency and domestic stock market recovered
Case Study: Brazil 2006 • 2006 Election Campaign • Lula once again front-runner • Favorable global conditions • Net government debt lower, dollar exposure diminished • Strong currency (appreciated 53% since Lula took office) • Low growth, string of high-profile scandals • Scandals led to resignation of nearly all cabinet ministers, top leaders of Lula’s Workers’ Party • Market response was sanguine
Conclusions • Market learning extends beyond the government formation period • Especially for developing countries, left governments. • Partisanship matters • Left governments, all else equal, represent higher risk of default. • Left partisan signal is more ambiguous: thus Left governments also generate greater uncertainty. • Policy uncertainty, however, is resolved as Left executives govern, so that investment risk declines as time in office increases.