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RED DE DIÁLOGO MACROECONÓMICO (R E D I M A). II REUNIÓN REDIMA CENTROAMERICA 10 de Noviembre de 2005 , Santiago de Chile. Debt Sustainability and Procyclical Fiscal Policies in Latin America Enrique Alberola and José Manuel Montero. OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION. Motivation
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RED DE DIÁLOGO MACROECONÓMICO (R E D I M A) II REUNIÓN REDIMA CENTROAMERICA 10 de Noviembre de 2005, Santiago de Chile Debt Sustainability and Procyclical Fiscal Policies in Latin America Enrique Alberola and José Manuel Montero
OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION • Motivation • Procyclicality of Fiscal Policy • Debt Sustainability and Fiscal Stance • Conclusions
I. Motivation • Empirical evidence shows that Fiscal policy is procyclical in Latin America • During expansions (contractions) • cyclically-adjusted revenues decrease (increase) • cyclically-adjusted expenditures increase (decrease) • Gavin and Perotti (1997), Alberola and Molina (2003) • Widespread phenomenon: • Talvi and Vegh (2000) show that FP is procyclical in a sample of 20 industrial countries and 36 developing countries. Exception: G-7 countries. • Kaminsky, Reinhart and Vegh (2004) for a sample of 104 countries. • Destabilizing role of fiscal policy • introduces an additional source of volatility.
Loosening Financing Constraints Tightening Expansion Activity Contraction Procyclical fiscal policy Voracity effects Improvement Debt sustainability Deterioration Loose Fiscal policy Tight I. Motivation • PUBLIC SECTOR CREDITWORTHINESS: • Procyclical FP determined by changes in financing conditions
I. Motivation • Does the stance of fiscal policy depend on creditworthiness, as measured by debt sustainability perceptions? • Empirical strategy • Test the procyclicality of FP in LA • Compute output gap and structural primary balance (SPB) • Are they correlated? • Test how perceptions of credit worthiness, embedded in debt sustainability impinges on fiscal stance • Derive indicator of debt sustainability : current threshold balance (CTB) • Estimate relationship between fiscal stance and CTB
II. Procyclicality of Fiscal Policy • Three steps: • Derive the output gap • Estimate the structural balance • Fiscal Stance= change of SPB as percentage of GDP SPB associated with cyclically-adjusted revenues public spending contractionary fiscal stance • Is Fiscal policy procyclical? • Test link SPB changes and output gap
II. Procyclicality of Fiscal Policy: Output Gap • OUTPUT GAP • Production function: OECD, IMF (EC shifting towards it) • Problems:data availability (labour stock, capacity use, K stock), data homogeneity, crises and volatility • Modified Hodrick-Prescott Filter (Kaiser and Maravall, 1999) • Pre-adjust the series by removing outliers ==> tackle sharp drops in activity • To overcome accuracy problems in both ends of the series we added forecasts and backcasts (actually, original series for backcasts and Consensus Forecasts for forecasts)
II. Procyclicality of FP: Structural Primary Balance • STRUCTURAL PRIMARY BALANCE • Simplified scheme differs from OECD • Cycle sensitive revenues, considered as a whole (no data) • Expenditure not depending on cycle (no unemployment benefits) • Account for the importance of commodity-related taxes: • OIL: Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico and Venezuela; • COPPER: Chile
II. Procyclicality of FP: Structural Primary Balance • 1.- Revenue elasticities wrt GDP and commodity prices • 2.- Structural component of public revenues: • where both Y* and P* are estimated by applying the Modified H-P filter • 3.- Structual Primary Balance (SPB, henceforth):
II. Procyclicality of FP: Structural Primary Balance • Sample: • Period: 1980-2004 • Countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela • Sources: IMF’s GFS and IFS complemented with national statistics • Caveat: fiscal data is for the central government, except for the public debt, which is for the consolidated government
II. Procyclicality of FP: SPB vs Output Gap In a more formal test, procyclicality of FP in LA is confirmed
III. Debt sustainability and Fiscal Stance • Why is fiscal policy procyclical? • We focus on sustainability concerns • impinge on perception of credit worthines • are reflected on financial indicators • Financial indicators coupled with debt level determine debt dynamics • Debt dynamics signal debt sustainability and therefore concerns • The level of debt is binding through the cycle if • High enough • Financing conditions are volatile and • closely related to the cycle • affect debt sustainability concerns • Putting these intuitions into testing: • 1.- Derive an indicator of fiscal sustainability: current threshold balance • 2.- CTB v. Fiscal Stance
III. Debt sustainability and Fiscal Stance: CTB • CURRENT THRESHOLD BALANCE (CTB) • Starting point: government’s budget constraint (%GDP) • Simplifying assumptions due to data availability: contingent liabilities, types of debt, seignorage • Hence, current threshold balance = debt-stabilising primary balance(D=0) • Note: no distinction internal/external debt, equal cost • We use a measure of implicit real interest rate derived from dividing interest payments over the stock of debt, both as %GDP • Overcome problems linked to that simplification
III. Debt sustainability and Fiscal Stance: CTB Caution: valuation effects, contingent liabilities, government definition
III. Debt sustainability and Fiscal Stance: SPB vs CTB • DOES THE FISCAL STANCE DEPEND ON DEBT SUSTAINABILITY CONCERNS? • Empirical analysis framed within the following regression: • CTB expected positive sign • Higher required primary balance triggers fiscal contraction (SPB) • FP reaction to sustainability concerns is expected to be a function of the sustainability problem itself • Larger gap, more impact on changes in SPBexpected negative sign • More evident impact of CTB on SPB • Controls: inflation, terms of trade, output gap, years-in-default dummies • Econometric issues: endogeneity and fixed effectsIV estimation methods
III. Debt sustainability and Fiscal Stance: SPB vs CTB • Baseline results: GMM difference estimator
III. Debt sustainability and Fiscal Stance: SPB vs CTB Robustness: estimation method: “simple” IV
III. Debt sustainability and Fiscal Stance: SPB vs CTB • Robustness: shorter sample: 1991-2004
IV. Conclusions • We have presented robust evidence on • Fiscal policy in Latin America is procyclical • This procyclicality is shown to be related to the evolution of fiscal sustainability • Deterioration of fiscal sustainability indicator, as measured by the CTB, leads to a fiscal tightening • The tightening is larger the worse is the level of debt sustainability, as measured by the ECM term • Once we control for debt sustainability fiscal policy is neutral • Extensions • Normative consequences. Is fiscal policy adequate? • Long term values of debt dynamics determinants • Why not doing it for CA + R.D?