TY - CEPII
A1 - Christophe Destais
TI - Are State-Contingent Sovereign Bonds the Solution to Avoid Government Debt Crisis?
IS - 2017-19
T3 - CEPII Policy Brief
KW - Sovereign Debt
KW - State Contingent Bonds
KW - GDP-linked Bonds
N2 - The idea that sovereign borrowers may issue new debt, the service of which is contingent or GDP growth (GDP linked bonds) has been increasingly discussed in recent years.
Some central banks (England, Canada and, recently, Germany and France) have taken steps to raise the awareness of stakeholders and launch a global conversation on GDP-linked bonds. The IMF participated in this debate though with extreme caution. The G20 mentioned the issue in its last Hamburg communiqué but refrained from taking side.
GDP-linked bonds offer many advantages. They would limit the issuers’ debt-service obligations in time of slow or negative growth, reduce the likelihood of debt crises and defaults, avoid sharp spending cuts in order to maintain access to capital markets, and even provide some latitude for additional spending at a time when it is most needed. GDP-linked bonds would also render investors more responsible when it comes to lending money to a sovereign. In addition, investors would know in advance the terms of their bond restructuring and gain an equity-like exposure to a country. The counter-cyclical feature of GDP-linked bonds and the fact that they would alleviate the economic cost of a debt restructuring would also make them beneficial for financial stability and the broader economy.
These benefits would justify a global policy initiative to promote the idea and kickstart the market.
However, many issues remain unresolved (pricing, design, institutional framework…). The learning curve for such a new financial product might, therefore, justify a cautious and experimental approach even though the quick development of a large GDP-linked bond market would have many advantages, including liquidity and arbitrage.
ER -