Primary Surpluses and sustainable Debt Levels in Emerging Market Countries
October 1, 2005
Disclaimer: This Policy Dicussion Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF.The views expressed in this Working Paper are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the IMF or IMF policy. Working Papers describe research in progress by the author(s) and are published to elicit comments and to further debate
Summary
This paper aims to put some constraints on the way primary surpluses are projected when making assessments of public debt sustainability. Projections should be tied either to the country's historical track record in generating surpluses-if the institutional and other factors accounting for this track record are expected to persist-or to some model that links primary surpluses to their fundamental determinants, either on the basis of constant institutions and policies or a credible reform program. History-based or model-based primary surplus projections provide a useful benchmark for judging the realism of fiscal forecasts underlying debt sustainability calculations. Together with information on future growth and interest rates, the primary surplus projections can be used to generate measures of overborrowing, and the magnitude of adjustment needed to return debt to a sustainable level.
Subject: Commodity prices, Debt sustainability analysis, Emerging and frontier financial markets, External debt, Financial markets, Fiscal policy, Fiscal stance, Prices, Public debt
Keywords: Commodity prices, debt, debt level, Debt sustainability analysis, Emerging and frontier financial markets, emerging market country, Fiscal stance, output gap, PDP, Primary surplus, public debt sustainability, sc, surplus-generating capacity, sustainable debt, template approach, underpinning debt sustainability
Pages:
19
Volume:
2005
DOI:
Issue:
006
Series:
Policy Discussion Paper No. 2005/006
Stock No:
PPIEA2005006
ISBN:
9781451975703
ISSN:
1564-5193





