Peer Pressure: How Relative Debt Drives Emerging Market Sovereign Spreads
Carmen Avila-Yiptong,
Georges Hatcherian and
Mahamoud Islam
No 2026/110, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
This paper shows that sovereign bond spreads are shaped not only by absolute debt levels but also by a country’s relative debt position within its peer group. Using panel fixed effects for over 80 emerging and developing economies over 1993-2024, we find that relative debt—especially benchmarked by income and commodity status—has greater explanatory power for spreads than gross debt alone. A one–standard deviation increase in relative debt raises spreads by roughly 0.2–0.3 standard deviations, comparable in magnitude to global risk indicators. Similarly, a 10 percent increase in relative debt is associated with a 3.8 percent increase in sovereign spreads, all else equal. The effect of relative debt is state-dependent, being stronger in countries with better institutions, access to concessional lending, and during periods of low risk aversion and ample global liquidity. These results hold across alternative specifications, sample periods, methodologies, and controls, which underscores the comparative nature of investor assessments and the importance of benchmarking for fiscal policy, debt management, and international surveillance.
Keywords: Sovereign spreads; emerging markets; debt; relative debt; peer benchmarking; investor risk perception; sovereign risk pricing; IMF working papers; IMF working paper No.; commodity status; sovereign bond spread; Income; Emerging and frontier financial markets; Oil prices; Global; Caribbean; South America; Central America; Middle East; Africa (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 32
Date: 2026-06-05
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