How Do Public Debt Cycles Interact with Financial Cycles? [electronic resource] / Tigran Poghosyan.
Material type: TextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 15/248Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2015Description: 1 online resource (33 p.)ISBN: 1513511645 :ISSN: 1018-5941Subject(s): All Countries | Asset Price Cycles | Credit Cycles | Debt | Duration Analysis | Equity | Bulgaria | Dominican Republic | Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China | Iran, Islamic Republic of | Korea, Republic ofAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: How Do Public Debt Cycles Interact with Financial Cycles?Online resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: We employ a duration model to study determinants of public debt cycles in 57 advanced and emerging economies over the 1960-2014 period, with a particular focus on the impact of financial cycles. The results suggest that the association between financial and debt cycles is asymmetric. Debt expansions preceded by overheating in credit and financial markets tend to last longer than other expansions, but there is no significant association between financial cycles and debt contractions. There is strong evidence of duration dependence in both phases of the cycle, with the likelihood of expansions and contractions to end increasing with the length of their respective spells. Higher initial level of debt increases the spell of contractions (persistence of adjustment effort hypothesis) and reduces the spell of expansions (debt sustainability hypothesis). This result is robust to the inclusion of global factors, openness, political stability, and debt crisis indicators as additional controls.We employ a duration model to study determinants of public debt cycles in 57 advanced and emerging economies over the 1960-2014 period, with a particular focus on the impact of financial cycles. The results suggest that the association between financial and debt cycles is asymmetric. Debt expansions preceded by overheating in credit and financial markets tend to last longer than other expansions, but there is no significant association between financial cycles and debt contractions. There is strong evidence of duration dependence in both phases of the cycle, with the likelihood of expansions and contractions to end increasing with the length of their respective spells. Higher initial level of debt increases the spell of contractions (persistence of adjustment effort hypothesis) and reduces the spell of expansions (debt sustainability hypothesis). This result is robust to the inclusion of global factors, openness, political stability, and debt crisis indicators as additional controls.
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