articleJan 1, 2007Closed access

Default Risk and Income Fluctuations in Emerging Economies

EEEmerging EconomiesCACristina ArellanoCACristina Arellano

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Abstract

Recent sovereign defaults in emerging countries are accompanied by interest rate spikes and deep recessions. This paper develops a small open economy model to study default risk and its interaction with output, consumption, and foreign debt. Default probabilities and interest rates depend on incentives for repayment. Default occurs in equilibrium because asset markets are incomplete. The model predicts that default incentives and interest rates are higher in recessions, as observed in the data. The reason is that in a recession, a risk averse borrower finds it more costly to repay non-contingent debt and is more likely to default. In a quantitative exercise the model matches various features of the business…

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Authors

3
  • EE
    Emerging EconomiesCorresponding

    Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

  • CA
    Cristina Arellano
  • CA
    Cristina Arellano

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Economics
  • Recession
  • Sovereign default
  • Default
  • Interest rate
  • Small open economy
  • Monetary economics
  • Volatility (finance)
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