The European debt crisis: Defaults and market equilibrium
Marco Lagi, Yaneer Bar-Yam

TL;DR
This paper develops a quantitative equilibrium model to analyze sovereign default risk, demonstrating that Greek debt interest rates are linked to debt-to-GDP ratios and predicting default timing, with implications for policy interventions.
Contribution
It introduces the first equilibrium model that relates market interest rates to economic fundamentals and predicts default timing based on debt levels.
Findings
Greek interest rates are related to debt-to-GDP ratio
Default expected when Greek debt reaches twice GDP
Interventions can delay or prevent predicted defaults
Abstract
During the last two years, Europe has been facing a debt crisis, and Greece has been at its center. In response to the crisis, drastic actions have been taken, including the halving of Greek debt. Policy makers acted because interest rates for sovereign debt increased dramatically. High interest rates imply that default is likely due to economic conditions. High interest rates also increase the cost of borrowing and thus cause default to be likely. If there is a departure from equilibrium, increasing interest rates may contribute to---rather than be caused by---default risk. Here we build a quantitative equilibrium model of sovereign default risk that, for the first time, is able to determine if markets are consistently set by economic conditions. We show that over the period 2001-2012, the annually-averaged long-term interest rates of Greek debt are quantitatively related to the ratio…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Financial Crisis and Policies · Fiscal Policies and Political Economy · Banking stability, regulation, efficiency
