Working paper

Interest Rate Shocks and the Composition of Sovereign Debt

Eugenia Gonzalez-Aguado

Abstract

There has been a growing concern about the vulnerability of emerging countries to fluc-tuations in international interest rates. Empirical evidence shows that these countries suffer significant output drops when developed countries raise their interest rates. In this paper, I document that an important determinant of the magnitude of this effect is the ability of coun-tries to issue sovereign debt domestically, rather than to external creditors. Moreover, I find that the level of financial development of domestic markets is positively related to the share of total public debt that is domestically held. I build a model that integrates a domestic banking sector into a sovereign default model where governments can issue domestic and external debt and decide whether to default on debt selectively. Due to financial frictions, issuing domestic debt crowds out investment in capital. As financial markets develop, crowding-out costs decrease, and banks demand lower interest rates on domestic bonds. Both effects reduce the relative cost to the government of borrowing domestically, leading to a higher share of domestic debt. The results of the quantitative solution of the model are consistent with the patterns of vulnerabil-ity to world interest rates and sovereign debt composition observed in the data. I show that financial development, through a less costly access to domestic debt, decreases the vulnerability of emerging economies to external shocks.

Keywords

Sovereign debt; Interest rates; International spillovers; Financial development;

JEL codes

  • E44: Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy
  • F34: International Lending and Debt Problems
  • F42: International Policy Coordination and Transmission

Reference

Eugenia Gonzalez-Aguado, Interest Rate Shocks and the Composition of Sovereign Debt, TSE Working Paper, n. 22-1379, November 2022.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 22-1379, November 2022