Credit Ratings and Fiscal Responsibility

Autor: Hanusch, Marek, Vaaler, Paul
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2015
Předmět:
INFORMATION
BUDGET DEFICITS
INVESTMENT
GLOBAL MARKET
PENSION FUNDS
DEBT DATA
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
SOVEREIGN DEFAULTS
BUDGET
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GOVERNMENT DEBT
BOND YIELDS
LOAN AGREEMENT
INFLATION
EMERGING MARKET
FISCAL DEFICIT
CREDITOR
RISK OF DEFAULT
LENDING
INSTRUMENT
FEDERAL RESERVE
PUBLIC BORROWING
FINANCIAL CRISIS
STOCK
SOVEREIGN BONDS
POVERTY
PENSION
INVESTORS
BONDS
FINANCIAL MARKET
PUBLIC FINANCES
MORAL HAZARD
GOODS
CREDIT RATING AGENCIES
SOVEREIGN RATING
EXCHANGE COMMISSION
CHECK
INTERESTS
TRANSPARENCY
TIMELY PAYMENT
FINANCIAL MARKETS
SOLVENCY
FINANCIAL OPENNESS
INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS
HOLDING
SOVEREIGN DEBT
BORROWERS
MARKETS
BORROWING COSTS
PROFIT
FINANCE
BUSINESS CYCLE
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
BUSINESS CYCLES
DEBT OFFERINGS
CREDIT RATINGS
LIABILITIES
CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS
DEFAULTS
MONETARY POLICY
FOREIGN BANKS
FISCAL DEFICITS
INSTRUMENTS
PAYMENT OF INTEREST
PUBLIC DEBT
DEBT
MARKET
INTEREST PAYMENTS
BOND YIELD
PROPERTY
SECURITIES EXCHANGE
RESERVE BANK
BUDGET DEFICIT
INDEBTED COUNTRIES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
SOVEREIGN RISK
SOVEREIGN BOND
BONDHOLDERS
CURRENCIES
FISCAL DISCIPLINE
PROPERTIES
DEBT OUTSTANDING
DEFICITS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
SOVEREIGN DEFAULT
LOCAL CURRENCIES
LENDERS
EXCHANGE
BOND SPREADS
FINANCES
PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS
GOVERNMENT REVENUES
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
CREDITWORTHINESS
FISCAL POLICY
RESERVE
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
EXCHANGE RATE
GOOD
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
INSURANCE
REVENUE
CURRENCY
TURNOVER
TAXES
BOND
SOVEREIGN LIABILITIES
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
DEFAULT
LOAN
EXPENDITURES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
SECURITIES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
ELECTIONS
FUTURE
LENDING LIMITS
PUBLIC DEBT DATA
CREDIT RATING
MONETARY FUND
ACCESS TO CAPITAL
FISCAL POLICIES
NATIONAL DEBT
MARKET RISK
DEVELOPMENT BANK
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
INVESTOR
SOVEREIGN RATINGS
INTEREST
BUDGETING
REVENUES
ELECTION
DEFICIT
SHARE
FOREIGN CURRENCY
REGULATORY STANDARDS
EXPENDITURE
Popis: The authors build on the findings from an earlier analysis, adding to the evidence base for the notion that credit rating agencies contribute to fiscal sustainability. To do so, the authors focus on election periods when political pressures for fiscal expansions are heightened. The literature on political budget cycles documents the tendency for budget deficits to increase in election years as governments attempt to appear economically competent by strategically providing additional publicly financed goods or services, or by cutting taxes. A rating downgrade, however, signals the opposite of competence as it implies an increase in the probability of sovereign default. Since credit ratings are widely observed - by financial markets as well as voters - they in effect serve as a disciplining device for fiscal policy not to submit to short-term spending pressures, thus keeping it responsible. The authors find that: (1) governments going into an election year immediately after a rating downgrade are 27 percentage points more likely to lose at the polls; and (2) governments going into an election year with a negative rating outlook (indicating a higher likelihood of a near-term downgrade) run smaller budget deficits compared to cases with positive or stable outlooks. Ratings act like fiscal rules disciplining governments when they are more vulnerable to political pressures on the budget - as opposed to fiscal policies supporting longer-term economic growth and development objectives.
Databáze: OpenAIRE