User:Nick Gardner/Public debt/Tutorials: Difference between revisions
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Interest rates are usually greater than gdp growth rates, so an average budget surplus will usually be required for sustainability. <br> If, for example, r were 5% and g were 2% then - on the original assumptions - a debt of 50% of gdp would require an average surplus of 1.5% of gdp a debt of 100% of gdp would require an average surplus of 3% of gdp, and so forth. | Interest rates are usually greater than gdp growth rates, so an average budget surplus will usually be required for sustainability. <br> If, for example, r were 5% and g were 2% then - on the original assumptions - a debt of 50% of gdp would require an average surplus of 1.5% of gdp a debt of 100% of gdp would require an average surplus of 3% of gdp, and so forth. | ||
The first qualification to those conclusions is that a deficit devoted exclusively to investments having positive net present values in financial terms would eventually, by definition, be self-financing and would therefore not require a surplus for sustainability. Thus the debt trap applies only to that part of the debt that is undertaken for other reasons. | The first qualification to those conclusions is that a deficit devoted exclusively to investments having positive net present values in financial terms would eventually, by definition, be self-financing and would therefore not require a surplus for sustainability. Thus the debt trap applies only to that part of the debt that is undertaken for other reasons, and that failure to take up successful investment opportunities imposes an opportunity cost on future generations. | ||
The second qualification concerns the possibility the growth rate, g, could be influenced by deficits contributing to an increase in public debt. At times of impending recession | |||
==International comparisons== | ==International comparisons== |
Revision as of 00:24, 31 March 2009
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Implications of the debt trap identity
The identity
According to the debt trap identity, the annual increase in public debt as a percentage of GDP is given by:
- Δd = f + d(r - g)
where d is public debt as a percentage of GDP and f is the primary budget deficit (shown with a negative negative sign if a surplus) as a percentage of GDP,
- (for proof of the identity, see paragraph 2 of the addendum subpage[1])
Sustainability
A necessary condition for long-term sustainability is that Δd does not consistently exceed zero - since otherwise the interest due would eventually amount to a greater percentage of GDP than could conceivably be financed from taxation. The dept trap, implies, therefore, that
- if the interest rate is greater than the growth rate, sustainability requires an average budget surplus ratio equal to at least d(r-g) and
- if the growth rate exceeds the interest rate, it requires that the budget deficit ratio does not on average exceed d(g-r).
However, the identity embodies the implicit assumptions that deficits earn no return, and that they do not affect growth rates or interest rates.
Since many diferent combinations of r, g are possible the debt trap identity does not define a unique relation between the the debt/gdp ratio, d and the minimum value of surplus/gdp (or maximum value of the deficit/gdp) ratio, f that is necessary for sustainability, even under the assumptions that have been implicitly adopted.
Some light can nevertheless be thrown on the issues by inserting some typical values for r and g and by qualifying the implicit assumptions.
Interest rates are usually greater than gdp growth rates, so an average budget surplus will usually be required for sustainability.
If, for example, r were 5% and g were 2% then - on the original assumptions - a debt of 50% of gdp would require an average surplus of 1.5% of gdp a debt of 100% of gdp would require an average surplus of 3% of gdp, and so forth.
The first qualification to those conclusions is that a deficit devoted exclusively to investments having positive net present values in financial terms would eventually, by definition, be self-financing and would therefore not require a surplus for sustainability. Thus the debt trap applies only to that part of the debt that is undertaken for other reasons, and that failure to take up successful investment opportunities imposes an opportunity cost on future generations.
The second qualification concerns the possibility the growth rate, g, could be influenced by deficits contributing to an increase in public debt. At times of impending recession
International comparisons
- ( % of GDP )
Japan Italy France Germany United States United Kingdom China Australia 2007 195 107 65 65 62 44 20 9 2014 est 222 118 79 77 100 76 19 4
- (Source: IMF [2])