Testing public debt sustainability with time-varying volatility: the case of Italy, 1861-2024
Vicente Esteve and
Nicola Rubino
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Vicente Esteve: Universidad de Valencia, Spain
Nicola Rubino: Universidad de Valencia, Spain
No 2610, Working Papers from Department of Applied Economics II, Universidad de Valencia
Abstract:
This paper investigates the long-run dynamics and sustainability of the Italian public debt-to-GDP ratio from 1861 to 2024. To address the presence of non-stationary volatility, we employ the recently de- veloped Time-Transformed Test methodology proposed by Kurozumi, Skorobotov, and Tsarev (2023). By utilizing the cumulative variance profile this approach homogenizes volatility across the time domain, en- suring the asymptotic validity of the STADF and GSTADF statistics and overcoming the size distortions inherent in standard recursive unit root tests. Our empirical findings confirm multiple explosive Ãbubbleà episodes in ItalyÃs fiscal history, specifically identifying three critical periods of exuberance: the 1913 anticipatory wartime shock, the 1978-1998 structural imbalance, and the 2020 exogenous pandemic-induced spike. While the 1978-1998 episode represents a unique two-decade era of structural divergence sustained by high private savings and debt monetization, the 2020 episode is identified as a temporary yet sig- nificant systemic shock. The study demonstrates that accounting for the evolution of the variance profile is imperative for a reliable fiscal analysis, o§ering an early-warning benchmark for monitoring modern debt-stabilization rules and evaluating ItalyÃs current fiscal resilience amidst rising debt projections for 2025-2026.
Keywords: Public Debt Sustainability; Explosive Bubbles; Time-Varying Volatility; GSADF; Italian Economy; Variance Profile (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C12 C22 E62 H62 H63 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-05
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