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Journal Article

Sovereigns Going Bust: Estimating the Cost of Default

Autoren

  • Kuvshinov
  • D.
  • Zimmermann
  • K.

Erscheinungsdatum

JEL Classification

H63 F34 F41 G01

Schlagworte

Staatsbankrott

Staatsschulden

Bankenkrisen

Lokale Prognosen

Inverse Propensity Score Weighting

What is the cost of sovereign default, and what makes default costly? This paper uses a novel econometric method – combining local projections and propensity score weighting as in Jordà and Taylor (2016) – to study these questions. We find that default generates a long-lasting output cost – 2.7% of GDP on impact and 3.7% at peak after five years – but in the longer term, economic activity recovers. The downturn is characterised by a collapse in investment and gross trade. The cost rises dramatically if the default is followed by a systemic banking crisis – peaking at some 9.5% of GDP – but is attenuated for economies with floating exchange rates. Our findings suggest that financial autarky, trade frictions and sovereign-banking spillovers play a key role in generating the cost of default.

Kiel Institut Expertinnen und Experten

  • Prof. Dr. Kaspar Zimmermann
    Forschungsdirektor

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