A
working paper by the Bank for International Settlements entitled "The real effects of debt" by Stephen Cecchetti, M.
Mohanty and Fabrizio Zampoli, is a particularly pertinent bit of research in
this time of troublesome levels of both personal and sovereign debt. In
this paper, the authors seek to answer the question "When does debt go
from good to bad?". The authors used an extensive dataset for OECD nations from the
years between 1980 and 2010 to examine the levels of government, non-financial
corporate and household debt and from that, derive a conclusion that gives us
some idea of when debt levels reach the danger point.
The
authors open by noting that "debt is a two-edged sword". Most
of us have used debt at one time or another to purchase a car, house or other
major consumer item, we are well aware that corporations issue bonds to fund
capital expenditures and that governments seem to issue endless reams of debt
to fund both capital and operational expenditures. As we all know, too
much consumer debt is a bad thing, a lesson that many unfortunate consumers in
the United States have learned the very hard way. We are now starting to
see the tide turn against nation after nation around the world as their
profligate spend and tax philosophies come home to roost, forcing nations to
adopt very painful austerity measures. The mounting levels of sovereign
debt have and will continue to force many nations to make painful program cuts
in what have traditionally been regarded as essential services. Apparently,
politicians, business owners/executives and households are learning that debt
beyond a certain level really is bad for growth as we see in mainstream media headlines (perhaps a bit too late!).
Debt
is used for good as a mechanism to smooth consumption, investment and taxes. In
the case of individuals, assuming debt allows households to continue to
purchase goods and services as their income levels change. In the case of
corporations, assuming debt allows them to continue to make investments in
equipment and production in the face of intermittent declines in sales. In
the case of governments, assuming debt allows them to smooth taxes as revenue
levels vary and can also assist governments in smoothing expenditures across
generations. Unfortunately, assuming increasing levels of debt increases
the risk that repayment may not take place, particularly in an environment
where interest rates rise and fall. Rather than smoothing the economy,
debt, when excessive, can result in economies that lurch between booms and
busts driven by threat of default. This is what is being experienced by much of
the Eurozone right now.
The graph on the left show the changes in the world's nominal level (not corrected for inflation) of household, non-financial
corporate and government debt (termed non-financial sector debt) over the past 30 years as a percentage of GDP:
According
to the authors, the level of all three types of debt has risen relentlessly
over the past three decades, from 167 percent of GDP in 1980 to 314 percent of
GDP in 2010, a rise of 5 percentage points per year over the 30 year period. Governments
account for 49 percentage points of the increase, corporations for 42
percentage points and households for 56 percentage points.
Now look at the graph on the right where the debt data is corrected for inflation. Real
government debt has risen by about 4.5 fold (for an average annual compounded growth
rate of 5.1 percent), corporate debt has risen by 3 fold (average growth rate
of 3.8 percent) and household debt has risen 6 fold (average annual growth rate
of 6.2 percent) for an overall annual average compounded growth rate of 4.5
percent.
Looking
more carefully at the graph, you will notice that the rise in household debt
(brown line) outstrips the rise in both corporate and government debt. That's a tad concerning, isn't it?
Here
is a chart that shows a country-by-country breakdown in total debt accumulation
over the 30 year period:
Total
debt in Japan in 2010 exceeded 450 percent of GDP, 350 percent in Belgium,
Portugal and Spain, 260 percent in the United States and 313 percent in Canada
with the median value at 322 percent.
Here
is an interesting graph showing the breakdown between the growth in
public and private debt in the United States since 1950:
Notice
that the level of total private and public debt remained relatively steady at
150 percent of GDP (with the level of public debt as a percentage of GDP actually declining) for the first thirty years, the level of debt began to rise in the early
1980s, restabilized at about 200 percent of GDP until the early 2000's when it
began to experience its most rapid and long term increase to nearly 270 percent
of GDP.
Why
has borrowing increased so much? First, an prolonged period of relatively
strong economic growth and low inflation lulled consumers (in the United States
in particular) into a false sense of security. Consumers consumed more and more, necessitating borrowing more from lenders only too willing to oblige. As
well, a rather substantial decline in real interest rates made the "drug
of borrowing" much easier to swallow. In addition, tax policies
including the deduction of mortgage interest, encouraged consumers to borrow
more as home ownership expanded, a tale that did not particularly end well.
Now, let's answer the question "when
does debt reach dangerous levels"? At what level does high overall debt
level begin to impact economic growth? Here is a graph that at least
partly answers the question:
The
authors took the mean per capita GDP growth levels (in light brown) for each of
the 18 OECD nations and plotted them against the mean of the non-financial sector debt as a percentage of GDP
(in khaki) which were divided into four quartiles or groupings based on size. Mean
per capita GDP growth rises as debt rises until we reach the fourth quartile
(highest debt-level nations with mean debt-to-GDP in excess of 300 percent)
where GDP growth shrinks noticeably. This shows that as non-financial sector debt rises, output
rises but only to a certain point when excessive debt results in shrinking
output. Using more sophisticated regression analysis, the authors show
that there are certain statistical debt thresholds beyond which the levels of
government, corporate and household debt will impact economic output. For
governments, the debt threshold is 84 percent of GDP, for corporate debt, the
threshold is between 75 and 90 percent depending on whether controls are in
place for banking crises and for household debt, the threshold is estimated at
84 percent. In the case of government debt, when the debt exceeds the 84
percent threshold, an additional 10 percentage point increase in debt-to-GDP
will actually drive growth downward by 10 to 15 basis points (0.1 to 0.15 percent). This additional debt has the exact opposite impact on the economy that governments want.
Many
governments around the world find themselves in the unenviable predicament of
"owning" a debt-to-GDP ratio that is in excess of the aforementioned
threshold values. Perhaps that explains why the stimulus programs of the
past 3 years have really done very little to boost economic growth over even the short-term. This
means that governments basically have no choice but to reduce deficits and
future debt liabilities, an issue that is rarely, if ever, discussed. Unfortunately
for all of us, this is highly unlikely since demographic changes are working
against any austerity measures. Aging populations have the unfortunate
impact of driving up expenditures just as revenues are falling, making a bad
situation far, far worse. As shown on these last two graphs, dependency ratios
(the non-working-age population as a percentage of the working-age population) are already
rising in many "advanced" nations and are projected to rise until the
mid-2050s:
As
many of us are aware, this is the demographic ticking time bomb that is already
having an impact on Japan, the holder of the world's second largest nominal
debt. Japan saw its dependency ratio being to rise in the early 1990s due largely to one of the world's lowest fertility rates as shown on this graph:
Nations with populations that are not replacing themselves all face the same issue at some point in time. Europe
and the United States are on the cusp of the dilemma now. Fortunately for
the world's emerging economies in Asia and Africa etcetera, they have been
given a demographic reprieve until the mid part of this century for the most
part. Unfortunately for the rest of us, many projections show that unless
fiscal policies change very soon, debt-to-GDP levels will explode as the
demographic demons come home to roost and baby boomers line up to collect their entitlements.
High levels of government debt become dangerous when the
ability of government to raise tax revenues to both service and repay the debt
is questioned. We are at that point now. No one wants to pay more taxes only to see them frittered away by politicians with a finely honed sense of entitlement. The impact of excessive debt held by corporations and households
complicates the issue further. The authors of this study conclude that
their is a very clear link between too much debt and a lack of economic growth.
With the demographic issues facing the world's developed economies over
the coming decades, the situation is likely to get far worse before it gets
better, even if all forms of debt are stabilized at their current excessively
high levels.
boring
ReplyDeleteThanks and Do Check this
ReplyDeletehttp://investorpedia.blogspot.com/2011/11/uk-recession-in-2012.html
Britain faces entering 2012 in recession as growth figures continue to flatline, according to economic research published this week. Figures for the last three months (Q4 or fourth quarter) are expected to show the economy contracting as manufacturing – which was supposed to drive recovery – struggles and the country’s services sector, which accounts for three-quarters of the economy, is said to be faltering.
Great article, although I did laugh when I saw the first comment - "boring". Almost indicative of the fact that no matter which way you look to slice the cake, there is always the same conclusion - there ain't enough cake.
ReplyDeleteThe sovreign defaults will start soon across Europe, but I imagine there will be no calamatous event as I was expecting a few years ago. I now believe that the kicking the can down the road will continue although the road is on an increasingly steep incline and the can doesn't go as far each time.
I don't subscribe to your two reasons why borrowing increased so much. Neither low inflation and low interest rates account for the first drammatic rise in debt in the 80's. The second, low interest rates, really should be bundled with CDS, CDO, Option ARM, low interest etc in a package of "excessive financial innovation". The difference is that CDS/CDO/Financial innovation along with the end of Glass Stegall, allowed the money supply to boom. So it wasn't just financial demand, it was a boom in financial supply.
I can't seem to find how to set an RSS feed to your blog (just the comments). Any ideas.
Great article! Soctrap: https://viableopposition.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss. That is the same with all blogspot blogs.
ReplyDeleteExcellent article! Insightful, interesting. Thank you.
ReplyDeletei agree to most of u, it is a nice article, n helpful for me, gave me some valuable n much needer perspective of over reliance on debt
ReplyDeleteinformative...
ReplyDeletefor every debt there is a debt holder. since debts are measured in currency, there will be relentless pressure continue to devalue currency by printing money.
ReplyDeleteWhat does research say about rising cost of education and how that moves debt from country to individual?
ReplyDeleteThe authors need to separate corporate from personal and government debt
ReplyDelete