Sovereign default and the stability of inflation targeting regimes

Authors
Publication date 2011
Series Tinbergen Institue Discussion Paper, TI11-064/2
Number of pages 29
Publisher Amsterdam/Rotterdam: Tinbergen Institute
Organisations
  • Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB) - Amsterdam School of Economics Research Institute (ASE-RI)
Abstract
We analyse the impact of interactions between monetary and fiscal policy on macroeconomic stability. We find that in the presence of sovereign default beliefs a monetary policy, which aims to stabilize inflation through an active interest rate policy, will destabilize the economy if the feedback
from debt surprises back to the primary surplus is too weak. This result, which relies on endogenous changes in the default premium, is at odds with the results in an environment without default risk, where an active monetary policy guarantees macroeconomic stability. The results are highly relevant for the design of fiscal and monetary policy in emerging markets where sovereign credibility is not well established. Recent debt developments in Western Europe and in the US suggest these results might become relevant for more mature financial markets too.
Document type Working paper
Note Also: Duisenberg school of finance: nr. DSF 20 - This version: January 2011
Language English
Published at http://www.tinbergen.nl/discussionpapers/11064.pdf
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