Debt, interest rates, and integration of financial markets
Fecha
2012-01-01Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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. It is commonly believed that higher budget deficits raise interest rates. However, these crowding out effects of
increasing public debt have usually been found to be small or non-existent. One explanation is that on
globalised bond markets interest rate differentials are offset due to financial integration. This paper tests
crowding out, and measures the degree of integration of government bond markets, using spatial modelling
techniques. Our main finding is that the crowding out effect of public debt on domestic long term interest
rates is small: a 1% increase in the debt ratio pushes up domestic rates by 2 pp at most. Financial integration
implies an important spillover effect via international bond markets, but only between OECD, and in particular
EU, countries. The feedback effect from these markets on long term interest rates is as important as the
domestic crowding out effect of higher public debt. Emerging markets are not as well integrated into
international capital markets, causing a stronger crowding out effec
Debt, interest rates, and integration of financial markets
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
0264-9993Palabras Clave
.Fiscal policy; Spillover; Interest rates; Crowding out; Spatial models