Hidden Debt Revelations
Sebastian Horn,
David Mihalyi,
Philipp Nickol and
Cesar Sosa-Padilla
No 32947, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
How reliable are public debt statistics? This paper quantifies the magnitude, characteristics, and timing of hidden debt by tracking ex post data revisions across a comprehensive new database of more than 50 vintages of World Bank debt statistics. In a sample of debt data covering 146 countries and 53 years, the paper establishes three new stylized facts: (i) debt statistics are systematically under-reported; (ii) hidden debt accumulates in boom years and tends to be revealed in bad times, often during IMF programs and sovereign defaults; and (iii) in debt restructurings, higher hidden debt is associated with larger creditor losses. The novel data is used to numerically discipline a quantitative sovereign debt model with hidden debt accumulation and an endogenous monitoring decision that triggers revelations. Model simulations show that hidden debt has adverse effects on default risk, debt-carrying capacity and asset prices and is therefore welfare detrimental.
JEL-codes: F34 G01 H63 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024-09
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Related works:
Working Paper: Hidden Debt Revelations (2024) 
Working Paper: Hidden Debt Revelations (2024) 
Working Paper: Hidden debt revelations (2024) 
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