An update to the work with @davidmihalyi & @valentin_lang on the effect of the #DSSI on sovereign bond spreads in poor countries. In a nutshell, spreads declined, consistent with the liquidity provision from the suspension of debt service #ResolvingSovereignDebt
A thread 1/8
The Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) provides debt relief to poor countries by deferring debt service due in 2020 without affecting the NPV of public debt. Liquidity provision under the DSSI accounts for about 20% of the fiscal shortfall due to the Covid-19 shock. 2/8
The DSSI is good for both creditors & debtors, but not all countries have joined. Why? A key motivation behind the reluctance to join are reputational concerns: participation may signal debt sustainability problems and trigger an increase in sovereign bond spreads 3/8
We take the DSSI announcement as a plausible exogenous shock to analyze the reaction of sovereign bond spreads in eligible countries. For identification we construct a counterfactual for each DSSI-eligible country using the synthetic control method (SCM) 4/8
We find that the gap between the actual spread and the one of the synthetic control started declining around the time when the first country decides to join. On average spreads declined by about 200 bps (more in a few countries) and no country experienced an increase 5/8
Results are confirmed in a generalized SCM setting and are robust to in-space and in-time placebos. Treating a sample of non DSSI-eligible countries and shifting the treatment one year back in time show no significant effect on spreads 6/8
To further support the positive effect of debt relief via liquidity provision, we test for heterogeneous effects in a diff-in-diff framework and show that the effect of the DSSI on spreads is larger for countries which received more debt service relief 7/8
Results matter for the ongoing discussions on extending the DSSI to 2021. Postponing debt service in response to a short-term shock could reduce spreads. But if the shock persists a liquidity crisis could evolve in a solvency one, which requires different solutions. End. 8/8
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In the paper, we show that this "reverse Robin Hood" mechanism is, at best, an incomplete explanation of the redistribution of rewards across consumers. We argue, instead, that reward cards constitute a redistribution from naive to sophisticated consumers
Thrilled to have our paper on the expansionary effects of negative rates on bank lending accepted @J_Fin_Economics. A short🧵on the main results (some are new from previous drafts), joint with Margherita Bottero, @CMinoiu, @persistdebt, Andrea Polo & @enrico_sette
We document that negative interest rate policy (NIRP) has expansionary effects on credit supply and the real economy through a portfolio rebalancing channel, similar to QE, and different from conventional policy rate cuts just above the ZLB
The announcement of NIRP shifted down and flattened the entire yield curve. The reduction in yields across all maturities incentivizes banks to rebalance their portfolio away from low or negative yielding assets to higher-yielding assets, such as corporate loans. Our results:
Una piccola storia di razzismo. Ultimo giorno di elementari, molti bambini si trovano al parco, genitori al seguito. Dopo un anno noto che mia figlia, che è entrata nella classe solo quest’anno ha stretto amicizia con solo due bambine, entrambe straniere e figlie di immigrati 1/n
Sarà un caso, ma forse è un segnale che quelle due bambine non erano integrate e quindi hanno trovato un’amicizia naturale in un’altra bambina ‘nuova’. Mi piace anche pensare che mia figlia, cresciuta in un ambiente multiculturale, non si accorga del colore della pelle 2/n
Ieri queste dinamiche erano chiarissime. Poi un genitore si chiede se Emma (nome di fantasia) ha davvero 10 anni. Infatti è molto più alta della amiche e, soprattutto, ha genitori Africani. Insomma, la storia di Weah che aveva 40 anni 3/n
The discussion on fiscal policy and r-g is even more important in times of unprecedented low growth and heightened uncertainty. In this thread, I summarize some findings on the role of public debt in amplifying the response of r-g to domestic and global shocks. 1/7
The main result is that high and increasing public debts, especially when denominated in foreign currency, can lead to adverse r-g dynamics in response to negative shocks 2/7
The idea is that liquidity shocks could lead to insolvencies in response to negative shocks, even with low-rates. This is especially true for high-debt countries, as the adverse effects of debt on growth and borrowing costs can lead to self-fulfilling bad equilibria 3/7
Just out @IMFNews a short note tracking the economic impact of #COVID19 and mitigation policies in Europe and the United States.
Below a short summary of the key findings: imf.org/~/media/Files/…
First, the sharp decline in electricity usage and the unique spike in unemployment insurance claims (~33 million as of today) highlight that the Great Lockdown is novel not only for its magnitude, but also for the speed at which the economy and the labor market are affected
Second, although #COVID19 is a truly global shock, regions and countries where the outbreak is more sizable experience significantly more severe economic losses (in terms of employment, hours worked and electricity usage)
Thread: Update on tracking the economic impact of #COVIDー19.
Electricity usage declined in Europe in the past week and especially in #Italy soon after the lockdown in early March. The decline in energy usage is close to -30% with respect to the same period in 2019
The decline in energy usage has been more sizeable in countries hit harder by the pandemic. However, the correlation becomes weaker as time passes, suggesting that the shock becoming less idiosyncratic as the virus spreads
Moving to the U.S., there is also evidence of a decline in energy consumption starting in April, as also shown by @JustinWolfers@UpshotNYT, and this correlation is stronger in states more affected by the pandemic nytimes.com/interactive/20…