- applied sciences
- Monday 19 April 2021, 19:00 - 20:00 (CEST)
Practical information
- When
- Monday 19 April 2021, 19:00 - 20:00 (CEST)
- Languages
- English
Description
Ugo Panizza, Professor of Economics and Pictet Chair in Finance and Development at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva, Director of the International Centre for Monetary and Banking Studies (ICMB), Vice President of CEPR and Fellow of the Fondazione Luigi Einaudi presents his latest paper "Legal air cover" (joint with Patrick Bolton & Mitu Gulati).
Abstract:
The economic harm being caused by the novel coronavirus may soon result in multiple sovereign debtors moving into default territory. But the existing playbook for dealing with multi-sovereign emerging market debt crises is blank. The only debt crisis scenario we know is protracted country-by-country and contract-by-contract negotiated workouts. As of this writing, expert groups are working on the design of a mechanism to run multiple sovereign debt workouts simultaneously. Those designs, however, will take time to configure and get international buy-in. This paper sets forth some options to provide temporary legal protection to the debtor countries in the meantime; while they are in need of diverting resources toward Covid amelioration. This is the notion of "legal air cover". The options we propose involve ex post state intervention in debt contracts. They are extreme and may come with risks. But we show that in the case of Greece, when intervention such as we envision was necessary, there were no negative spillovers on periphery Eurozone debt markets associated with the Greek ex post modification of contract terms.
Andrea Presbitero, Associate Professor of Economics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), CEPR Research Fellow and member of the Money & Finance Research (MoFiR), Senior Economist in the Research Department's Macro-Financial Division of the International Monetary Fund presents his latest paper "Borrowing costs after debt relief" (joint with Valentin Lang & David Mihalyi).
Abstract:
Can debt moratoria help countries weather negative shocks? We study the bond market effects of an official debt service suspension endorsed by the international community during the Covid-19 pandemic. Using daily data on sovereign bond spreads and synthetic control methods, we show that countries eligible for official debt relief experience a larger decline in borrowing costs compared to similar, ineligible countries. This decline is stronger for countries that receive a larger relief, suggesting that the effect works through liquidity provision. By contrast, the results do not support the concern that official debt relief could generate stigma on financial markets.
Registration
Registration is ongoing - details on the participation will be sent by email to registered participants.
Further information
This conference is co-organised by the Center for European Studies (CefES) of the University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, and the JRC.
For more information, visit the webinar pageor email cefesunimib [dot] it (cefes[at]unimib[dot]it)
Venue
online, EU