Angélique Herzberg
University of Düsseldorf
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Journal of Economic Surveys | 2009
Kathrin Berensmann; Angélique Herzberg
The most practicable short-term approaches for sovereign debt restructuring would include a code of conduct (voluntary approach) and collective action clauses (contractual approach). In the medium term, a sovereign insolvency procedure (statutory approach) may have an important role to play because it would be a comprehensive instrument designed to coordinate different creditor groups prior to and during a debt crisis. This paper provides a survey of six comprehensive policy proposals for a sovereign bankruptcy procedure. It points to approaches that could improve existing proposals and creates a basis for new proposals which could prove conducive to reaching political consensus. Copyright
Archive | 2015
Angélique Herzberg
This chapter is devoted to a widespread concept of external sustainability which is originally motivated by the notion of fiscal sustainability used in the literature on public finance. Fiscal sustainability is typically defined as the government’s ability to indefinitely continue the same set of fiscal and/or monetary policies while remaining solvent (Burnside, 2005, p. 11). This notion encompasses two central aspects: It builds upon the concept of solvency, i.e., an entity’s ability to repay its debt without explicitly defaulting on it. Beyond that, it imposes a “baseline” on future policy actions (Milesi-Ferretti and Razin, 1996a, p. 4) by requiring the policy stance to be unchanged.
Archive | 2015
Angélique Herzberg
This chapter gives an overview of the empirical studies on the intertemporal budget constraint (IBC). Based on the sufficient conditions for the validity of the IBC derived in the previous chapter, the relevant empirical literature can be mainly divided into three groups. The first group seeks to determine the order of integration in the net international investment position (NIIP) and the current account series because difference-stationarity of the NIIP and the current account (of any order) is sufficient to satisfy the IBC. When the NIIP is stationary in levels or first differences, the current account is stationary in levels and sustainable in the strong sense; when the NIIP is stationary in (at least) second differences, the current account is stationary in first differences and sustainable in the weak sense. The first group of the studies on the validity of the IBC is examined in section 5.1.
Archive | 2015
Angélique Herzberg
There exists a large number of indicators on which both policy makers and economists rely in their assessment of external sustainability. The general consensus is that no single indicator is capable of fully capturing external sustainability (IMF, 2002). This chapter focuses on the most widely used indicators; many of them involve the notion of solvency, that is, require that the economy meets its intertemporal budget constraint.
Archive | 2015
Angélique Herzberg
The main task of this chapter is to identify testing conditions that imply the validity of the intertemporal budget constraint and, equivalently, the transversality condition in the data. Empirical tests, by their nature, examine the question whether the IBC is satisfied provided that there will be no major changes in the relevant features of the macroeconomic environment and no changes in the fiscal or monetary policies (Corsetti and Roubini, 1991, p. 355). Further, as sections 4.1 and 4.2 in this chapter will show, it has been so far only possible to find sufficient conditions for the respect of the IBC in the data. In other words, empirical tests can provide evidence in favor of sustainability, yet they cannot verify the lack of sustainability. Different sufficient conditions for the validity of the IBC in the data have different implications for the path of the current account balance. Following the terminology coined by Quintos (1995, p. 411) for the area of fiscal sustainability, we divide them into two categories: those which imply a stationary current account series and those which entail a nonstationary current account series.
Archive | 2015
Angélique Herzberg
The balance of payments records all economic transactions between residents and non-residents during a specific period of time. In the balance of payments statistics, an economy’s current account is decomposed into international flows associated with transactions in goods and services, net factor income—also called primary income—and unilateral current transfers—also called secondary income (IMF, 2008, p. 13).
Archive | 2015
Angélique Herzberg
One approach to external sustainability is based on the idea that external imbalances are sustainable as long as they are the outcome of agents’ optimal decisions (e.g., Edwards, 2007; Blanchard and Milesi-Ferretti, 2009, 2011). An example for external imbalances which are not worrisome are current account surpluses in countries in which the population ages faster than in other countries and which increase their savings in anticipation of the future dissaving once when the number of retirees increases (Blanchard and Milesi-Ferretti, 2009). Another example are current account deficits run by countries which have deeper and more advanced financial markets than other countries and which attract international investors and accumulate foreign liabilities (Mendoza et al., 2007; Caballero et al., 2008a).
Communications in Statistics-theory and Methods | 2013
Frederik Herzberg; Angélique Herzberg
We prove, via the Borel-Cantelli lemma, that for every sequence of Gaussian random variables the combination of convergence in expectation and decreasing variances at fractional-polynomial rate implies strong convergence. This result has an important consequence for macroeconomic stochastic infinite-horizon models: The almost sure transversality condition (i.e., fiscal sustainability with probability one) is satisfied if (a) the discounted levels of net liabilities are Gaussian-distributed with fractional-polynomially decaying variances and (b) their means converge to zero. If (a) holds but (b) fails, the transversality condition will be almost surely violated. Hence, (a) and (b) constitute a test for almost sure fiscal sustainability.
Archive | 2007
Kathrin Berensmann; Angélique Herzberg
Sovereign Debt: From Safety to Default | 2011
Kathrin Berensmann; Angélique Herzberg; Robert W. Kolb