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deuda publica America Latina Caribe COVID-19 coronavirus

Avoiding a New Lost Decade for Latin America and the Caribbean

October 15, 2020 by Andrew Powell - Oscar Valencia 1 Comment


The Covid-19 pandemic has unleashed a health and economic crisis. Countries are providing exceptional support to families and firms and suffering significant losses in public revenues. Debt ratios are rising. Getting fiscal policy right and maintaining financial stability will be key to ensuring a return to growth and avoid a lost decade in Latin America and the Caribbean.

A baseline simulation suggests debt in Latin America and the Caribbean will rise from 57% in 2019 to 74% at the end of 2020 and 78% by 2021. Still, how debt ratios turn out in the next couple of years will depend critically on the speed of the recovery and in particular, whether it follows a V, a U or another letter. A more negative scenario with a more U-shaped recovery would imply higher debt levels.[2] Getting policies right to manage higher debt levels without sacrificing growth will be critical to avoiding deeper problems.

Fiscal positions vary across the region. Public support in the face of the Covid-19 crisis was calibrated given the fiscal space available. Chile and Peru, with low levels of debt, implemented large relief packages of 6%-8% of GDP (or 10%-16% if off-balance sheet guarantee programs are included). Consequently, debt is rising very rapidly. At the other end of the spectrum Barbados, Belize, Ecuador, and Jamaica all announced packages of less than 2% of GDP. Mexico is a special case, having announced a relatively small package, as is Brazil which has advanced a large package with a relatively high gross debt- to-GDP ratio. But a significant fraction of Brazil’s gross debt is on the central bank’s balance sheet, and the majority of the debt is held by domestic institutional investors and in local currency. The ownership and the composition of debt is just as important as the level in determining sustainability and liquidity risks. Still, Brazil now faces a period of adjustment to ensure sustainability.

Indeed, most countries are caught between the objectives of providing relief and maintaining economic recovery, and the need to adjust to halt the rise in debt due to exceptional spending and a fall in revenues. Reductions in the tax take, related to the depth of the recessions, have been on the order of 1% to 4% of GDP. A V-shaped recovery would help, reversing revenue losses. Delayed recovery would imply painful adjustment or further rises in debt ratios.

Adjustment can come in many forms. Broadly speaking, countries in Central America have low spending so there is less room for cuts or large efficiency gains. But given low tax burdens, there is ample space to increase revenues when economies recover. In South America, by contrast, most countries already have significant tax burdens. But there is ample room to improve the efficiency of spending. In the Caribbean, there is room to improve efficiency on spending and revenue collection. Spending in most countries has been biased against investment and towards consumption. Shifting the composition of spending to investment in infrastructure over time could yield higher growth and hence improve fiscal space, assuming good projects are selected, and the investment process is efficient.[3]

The speed of adjustment is another critical variable. A faster adjustment has the advantage of a lower cost of debt service. Yields on debt rose at the outset of the crisis and while they have come down, they are well above the very low rates in advanced economies that are typically able to finance their needs almost exclusively in local currency. But sharper cuts to spending or tax hikes imply less relief and may delay recovery. A more gradual adjustment would be better to foster growth but runs the risk of higher debt service costs. Credible fiscal institutions are currently at a premium as they allow interest rates to stay low.[4] This reduces the costs of any adjustment, but it is particularly important for a more gradual approach. Weak fiscal institutions that put in doubt future plans may prompt rating downgrades and push up interest rates.

In our baseline scenario, debt for the typical country in the region will rise to 80% of GDP in 2023 and then fall to 78% by 2025. The average interest rate is estimated at roughly 3.8% and average growth is expected to be 2.7% for the period 2021-2025. If taxes are raised an additional 1% of GDP and spending is cut an additional 1% of GDP relative to that baseline, then debt would be 1.5 points of GDP lower by 2025. But if through improved fiscal institutions, interest rates could be lowered to 2.8%, then debt would rise to just 76% by 2023 and would be 6 points of GDP below the baseline by 2025. Growth for the period 2021-2015 would be 0.2% per annum higher.

The deep crisis, the higher government spending to support families and firms during the crisis and the losses in public revenues have led to calls for “debt relief”.[5]  Low income countries borrow principally from official rather than commercial sources. Their debt is bilateral or on the balance sheet of multilateral institutions. It is long-term and at very low, concessional interest rates. The G20 has already called for bilateral lenders to provide relief, but most countries in Latin America and the Caribbean are middle income and their borrowing from the private sector dwarfs loans from official sources. Official lenders are boosting their lending as their current levels of capital allow. Access to typically pro-cyclical private markets is patchy.

Research suggests countries face a difficult choice if they need to renegotiate commercial debts.[6] They may reprofile, pushing out maturities but with no haircut on the amounts owed. This may be done relatively quickly and buys time, but it may not solve the underlying problem. If it doesn’t, then the country may have to re-reprofile again or multiple times. Belize and Jamaica, for example, have reprofiled debts several times over the last decade or so. Alternatively, a country might seek a deeper restructuring, with a greater likelihood of solving the underlying problem. But that can also provoke legal action from creditors in courts around the world, complicating and delaying the process. Recent innovations in bond contracts known as the new Collective Action Clauses (CACs) may have provided a more efficient and faster route for countries to restructure. Argentina and Ecuador have successfully renegotiated debt aided by CACs.

The 1980’s was a lost decade for the Latin America and the Caribbean. There is concern that it could happen again. A relatively small number of large international banks accounted for much of the lending at that time. The theory was that renegotiations should be straightforward with only a few key players involved. But bankers and their regulators were reticent to recognize the losses on lenders’ balance sheets and dragged the process out. The debt and the specter of being in default persisted, affecting investment and growth, and countries only escaped the trap when the debt was converted to bonds and sold through the so-called Brady deals.[7] The good news today is that most countries have new CAC’s in their bond contracts. So, if debt has to be restructured with haircuts, it should happen more swiftly. But the other major driver of the lost decade was a series of very costly financial crises and bailouts that fueled the rise in debt. While banks entered the Covid-19 era with healthy balance sheets, the steep falls in GDP will surely place significant stress on financial sectors. We are yet to see the full impacts on banks’ balance sheets.[8]

The next few years are going to be challenging as countries seek to boost growth and maintain fiscal sustainability. The risks are very real. The war against the virus is not yet won in Latin America and the Caribbean and a serious second wave in the US or in Europe could hurt global recovery. Getting the fiscal policies right and maintaining financial stability will be critical for a healthy recovery.


[1] We wish to thank Matilde Angarita for excellent research assistance in relation to the simulations employed in this blog.

[2] These figures are based on simple averages across countries. In the baseline, growth is assumed to be -7.0% in 2020 and +4.4% in 2021 in line with recent forecasts sourced from Bloomberg.

[3] See “From Structures to Services” the 2020 IDB Development in the Americas Flagship Report for a discussion of the issues in infrastructure planning and efficiency among other topics.

[4] Monetary policy acts on short term rates but longer-term interest rates and dollar yields that are key for the servicing costs of debt are market determined and to a large degree reflect risk.  In “Sovereign Default Risk and Fiscal Rules” Jose Gomez-Gonzalez, Oscar M. Valencia and Gustavo A. Sanchez find established fiscal rules lower interest rates and default risks.

[5] See for example “Suspend Emerging and Developing Economies Debt Payments” by Carmen Rheinhart and Ken Rogoff although see “Emerging Economies Need New Finance, Not Moratoriums” by Mauricio Cardenas for an alternative view.

[6] See “Sovereign Defaults: has the current system resulted in lasting (re)solutions?” by Rodrigo Mariscal, Andrew Powell, Guido Sandleris and Pilar Tavella.

[7] See “Is the Euro-zone on the Mend? Latin American examples to analyze the Euro question,” Journal of Banking and Finance by Eduardo Cavallo, Eduardo Fernandez- Arias and Andrew Powell.

[8] See Sound Banks for Health Economies Andrew Powell and Liliana Rojas-Suarez for an analysis of banking sector risks and recommendations.


Filed Under: Macroeconomics, Macroeconomics and Finance Tagged With: #coronavirus, #COVID-19, #debt

Andrew Powell

Andrew Powell is the Principal Advisor in the Research Department (RES). He holds a Ba, MPhil. and DPhil. (PhD) from the University of Oxford. Through 1994 he dedicated himself to academia in the United Kingdom as Prize Research Fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford and Associate Professor (Lecturer) at London University and the University of Warwick. In 1995, he joined the Central Bank of Argentina and was named Chief Economist in 1996. He represented Argentina as a G20/G22 deputy and as member of three G22 working groups (on crisis resolution, financial system strengthening and transparency) in the late 1990’s. In 2001, he returned to academia, joining the Universidad Torcuato Di Tella in Buenos Aires as Professor and Director of Graduate Programs in Finance. He has been a Visiting Scholar at the World Bank, IMF and Harvard University. He joined the IDB Research Department in 2005 as Lead Research Economist and in 2008 served as Regional Economic Advisor for the Caribbean Region until returning to the Research Department as the Principal Advisor. He has published numerous academic papers in leading economic journals in areas including commodity markets, risk management, the role of multilaterals, regulation, banking and international finance. Current projects include new papers on capital flows and corporate balance sheets, on sovereign debt restructuring and on the preferred creditor status of multilateral development banks.

Oscar Valencia

Oscar Valencia es Especialista Principal en la División de Gestión Fiscal del BID y líder de la plataforma FISLAC, Sostenibilidad Fiscal para América Latina y el Caribe. Antes de unirse al BID, Oscar fue Director General de Política Macroeconómica en el Ministerio de Finanzas de Colombia. Se ha desempeñado como secretario técnico del Comité Independiente para la Regla Fiscal de Colombia y miembro de varios consejos de administración en organizaciones colombianas como Colpensiones (Sistema Público de Pensiones Definido de Colombia), Coljuegos (Regulador Nacional del Juego de Colombia), así como Director Gerente Interino de Fogafin (Fondo de Garantía de Instituciones Financieras). También fue investigador del Banco Central de Colombia y del Departamento Nacional de Planeación de Colombia. Previamente fue consultor en temas fiscales en el Departamento de Investigación del BID. Los intereses de investigación de Oscar se encuentran en los campos de la política fiscal y la macroeconomía, principalmente las economías emergentes. Ha publicado en varias revistas académicas sobre temas relacionados con la política macroeconómica. Tiene un Ph.D. en Economía con Honores y Maestría en Economía Matemática de la Escuela de Economía de Toulouse (TSE), y Licenciatura y Maestría en Economía con Honores de la Universidad Nacional de Colombia.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Douglas Ungredda says

    October 19, 2020 at 12:34 pm

    Unfortunately all these countries are singing with the same score so to speak in terms of their component structures of GDP but there is not much scope for fiscal coordination nor regional collective actions. Furthermore and not mentioned in the analysis is that many if not most of the Caribbean basin economies’current accounts critically depend from tourism (physical presence) activity and inflows from unilateral transfers. . The best assistance to the region is to alleviate the plight of their foreign based citizens and allow them to work and keep sending their contributions ,ease travel restrictions and reopen borders. Sanitary conditions for biosecurity must be guaranteed as a must. Moreover, high risk premiums in their debts must come down if fiscal support can make these economies responsive foreign aid flows.

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