Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5083496 International Review of Economics & Finance 2014 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We use EBA techniques to examine if any of the conclusions from the existing studies is robust to small changes in the conditioning information set.•Accumulated arrears can be perceived as an early signal of default.•Adjusting governmental policies and fighting political risks are important recommendations.

A vast and growing empirical literature aims at identifying key determinants of sovereign default. The literature is extensive and controversial. Can policy-makers use this body of research to learn anything that can help reduce the likelihood of sovereign default? We use a variant of Extreme Bound Analysis (EBA) to examine if any of the conclusions from the existing studies on the determinants of sovereign default is robust to small changes in the conditioning information set. Our EBA, spanning 190 countries over 1970-2010, upholds the robustness of the observed association between sovereign default and credit worthiness, growth, leverage on export earnings, debt service ratio, reserves, inflation, exchange rate, trade deficit, corruption, and democratic accountability. At the same time, our EBA reveals that the correlations between sovereign default and several of the controversial variables (namely, openness, central bank liabilities, interest payments, cost of borrowing, imports, exports, per capita GNP, and government stability) are highly sensitive to small alterations in the conditioning information set.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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