Interesting
research by Kenneth Rogoff, Carmen Reinhart and Vincent Reinhart takes a look
at 200 years of public debt overhang episodes where public debt-to-GDP levels
exceed 90 percent for at least five years. In the paper entitled "Debt Overhangs: Past and Present", released in the spring of
2012, the authors look at the impact of high public debt on economic growth and
interest rates and how long these excessive debt episodes last. Here is a
summary of their findings.
Let's
open by taking a look at a graph from the paper showing how gross government
debt for both emerging markets and advanced economies has varied as a
percentage of GDP since 1900:
Notice
that, since the middle of the first decade of the new millennium, the debt
transgressors that consisted of the emerging markets in the 1980s and 1990s
have been replaced (and rather rapidly so) by the debt "sins" of the
world's advanced economies. The debt of the emerging market nations has
fallen from a high of just under 100 percent of GDP to its current level of
just over 40 percent whereas the debt of the world's advanced economies has
done exactly the opposite, rising at an exponential rate. The
authors project that the 22 nations of the advanced economies are now
experiencing a public debt overhang as their average debt exceeds the 90
percent of GDP hurdle. You will also notice that the advanced economies
had a debt peak in the 1940s; this was a result of massive spending on World
War II. A somewhat lower peak developed for the world's emerging
countries during the early 1930s as a result of spending during the Great
Depression.
Here
is a chart showing the debt-to-GDP for the Eurozone nations among other debt
and deficit data:
Out
of the EU27, five nations have a debt overhang and the major economies of
France, Germany and the United Kingdom are well on their way to reaching the 90
percent level. Looking further afield, two of the world's largest
economies, Japan and the United States, also have debt-to-GDP levels that
exceed the 90 percent mark with Japan hitting just under 200 percent and the
United States passing the 100 percent mark earlier this year.
If
we look at the growth in the total gross public debt as a percentage of GDP of
all of the 22 advanced and 25 emerging economies since 1970, here's what we end
up with:
The
total debt of the 22 advanced economies is 250 percent of GDP, nearly 10 times
the total debt-to-GDP for the 25 nations of the emerging economies. That
is nothing but amazing and is a bit counter-intuitive to what many people would
expect.
Among
the 22 advanced economies over the 200 years of the study, which had the worst
debt situations? Nine countries, including Austria, Denmark, Finland, Germany,
Iceland (until 2009), Norway, Portugal (until 2010), Sweden and Switzerland had
no debt overhangs. All other nations had at least one debt overhang where
debt exceeded 90 percent of GDP. Here is a chart from the study showing
the worst offenders with debt overhangs of more than a decade in length:
Here
is a companion chart showing the episodes of public debt in excess of 90
percent that are of less than a 10 year duration:
Greece
is the worst offender of the 13 lengthy overhang nations with four episodes of
very high debt-to-GDP since 1848, covering a total of 95 years out of the 163
year sample (58 percent of the time). Italy has four episodes since 1861
(one is less than 10 years in length) covering at total of 74 years out of the
150 years (49 percent of the time). All told, for the 10 nations with
long debt overhangs, the average length of the overhang is a stunning 27.3
years! For the entire sample of all nations including those with shorter
duration overhangs, the average period of high debt levels is a still amazing
23 years.
Now
that we've established that the world's largest economies are in a debt
overhang position as defined by the authors of the paper and that these debt
overhangs can last for decades, what are the repercussions?
1.)
Lowered GDP growth:
From data for the advanced economies, prior to the debt surpassing the 90
percent hurdle, real GDP growth averaged 3.5 percent per year over the full
period of time that debt remained below the debt overhang threshold. During
the debt overhang episodes, economic growth slowed to an averaged of 2.3
percent with a median of 2.1 percent, a drop of either 1.2 or 1.4 percent from
the lower debt period. Here is a graph showing the cumulative effect of
lower growth over a 23 year-long debt overhang (in red):
We
wonder why our economies just don’t seem to be firing on all cylinders since
the Great Recession, don’t we?
Perhaps all of that stimulus did exactly what governments didn’t expect! To put the 1.2 percent per annum drop
into a long-term perspective, over the 23 year period (the average of debt
overhangs as noted above), total real economic growth loss is 24 percent.
2.)
Interest Rates: It
is generally thought that as debt rises, the interest rate premium on that debt
rises as well, since the risk on each nation's debt securities rises. In
this study, of the 26 episodes of high debt, 15 periods had higher real
interest rates and a not insignificant 11 episodes actually had lower real
interest rates. Interestingly enough, four of the 26 episodes had both
low interest real interest rates and lower economic growth, a seeming
contradiction to what we would normally expect.
In summary, the world is facing a debt hurdle that may last
far, far longer than we would expect. When we read headlines in the
mainstream media that predict that Europe's debt problems appear to be solved,
we should not be terribly surprised when a new issue seems to appear out of nowhere.
After all, when compared to precedents set over the past two centuries,
the world's current public debt crisis appears to be in its infancy. What
will be telling is to see whether the world's debt markets can continue to
absorb the massive amounts of new sovereign debt that will be required to keep
the world's economy turning.
Earlier, I was the one that wrote that the US economy is slow because it's supposed to be. It's economy survived on debt and, as such, it'll take a long time to recover from that even if you do everything right.
ReplyDeleteIt's not much different from a household that decides to stop using credit cards after running a 50,000 bill. They will have to live, not 'within their means' but well below their means until that debt is paid.
It looks like we'll be all doing the same thing, for a few decades.
Exactly. Well said.
ReplyDeleteNew world order happening. The whole thing is a big scam to take over sovereign control over European countries.
ReplyDeleteThis money that continually is getting borrowed is coming from somewhere...?? All the countries have debt so I wonder who has these deep pockets...
This whole debt issue is by design, that's all period!
A BIG SCAM
Your articles are excellent! But I have a hard time reading some of the charts. I think the problem is low resolution of the images. Of course you always provide the source of the charts, but still.
ReplyDeleteYes, thank you for the article. But I suffer from the same problem as Walter. Is there any way we can get the charts more clearly?
ReplyDeleteWhy has Japan not yet started to emerge from its overhang? It must have lastet more than the average time by now.