External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth
High ratios of external debt to GDP in selected Asian countries have contributed to the initiation, propagation, and severity of the financial and economic crises in recent years, reflecting runaway fiscal deficits and excessive foreign borrowing by the private sector. More importantly, the servicin...
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sg-smu-ink.soe_research-19802010-09-23T05:48:03Z External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth Mariano, Roberto S. Villanueva, Delano High ratios of external debt to GDP in selected Asian countries have contributed to the initiation, propagation, and severity of the financial and economic crises in recent years, reflecting runaway fiscal deficits and excessive foreign borrowing by the private sector. More importantly, the servicing of large debt stocks has diverted scarce resources from investment and long-term growth. Applying and calibrating the formal framework proposed by Villanueva (2003) to Philippine data, we explore the joint dynamics of external debt, capital accumulation, and growth. The relative simplicity of the model makes it convenient to analyze the links between domestic adjustment policies, foreign borrowing, and growth. We estimate the optimal domestic saving rate that is consistent with maximum real consumption per unit of effective labor in the long run. As a by-product, we estimate the steady-state ratio of net external debt to GDP that is associated with this optimal outcome. The framework is an extension of the standard neoclassical growth model that incorporates endogenous technical change and global capital markets. The major policy implications are that in the long run, fiscal adjustment and the promotion of private saving are critical; reliance on foreign saving in a globalized financial world has limits; and when risk spreads are highly and positively correlated with rising external debt levels, unabated foreign borrowing depresses long run welfare. 2005-06-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/981 Research Collection School Of Economics eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Finance Growth and Development |
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Finance Growth and Development Mariano, Roberto S. Villanueva, Delano External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth |
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High ratios of external debt to GDP in selected Asian countries have contributed to the initiation, propagation, and severity of the financial and economic crises in recent years, reflecting runaway fiscal deficits and excessive foreign borrowing by the private sector. More importantly, the servicing of large debt stocks has diverted scarce resources from investment and long-term growth. Applying and calibrating the formal framework proposed by Villanueva (2003) to Philippine data, we explore the joint dynamics of external debt, capital accumulation, and growth. The relative simplicity of the model makes it convenient to analyze the links between domestic adjustment policies, foreign borrowing, and growth. We estimate the optimal domestic saving rate that is consistent with maximum real consumption per unit of effective labor in the long run. As a by-product, we estimate the steady-state ratio of net external debt to GDP that is associated with this optimal outcome. The framework is an extension of the standard neoclassical growth model that incorporates endogenous technical change and global capital markets. The major policy implications are that in the long run, fiscal adjustment and the promotion of private saving are critical; reliance on foreign saving in a globalized financial world has limits; and when risk spreads are highly and positively correlated with rising external debt levels, unabated foreign borrowing depresses long run welfare. |
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Mariano, Roberto S. Villanueva, Delano |
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Mariano, Roberto S. Villanueva, Delano |
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Mariano, Roberto S. |
title |
External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth |
title_short |
External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth |
title_full |
External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth |
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External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth |
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External Debt, Adjustment, and Growth |
title_sort |
external debt, adjustment, and growth |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2005 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/981 |
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1770569356239962112 |