Investors trade the guaranteed payout of a fixed-income investment for an equity position... In other words, investors accept to share risk. Could a similar mechanism be applied when a sovereign nation has to restructure its debt, tying payouts to its future economic performance?
When corporations have too much debt and need to restructure it,
creditors often end up exchanging bonds or loans for stocks. They trade
the guaranteed payout of a fixed-income investment for an equity
position whose return depends on the company’s future results. In
other words, investors accept to share risk. Could a similar mechanism
be applied when a sovereign nation has to restructure its debt, tying
payouts to its future economic performance? New IMF staff research looks
at possible innovative sovereign debt instruments that could do both:
help creditors and debtors reach agreement on how to restructure debt by
sharing some upside potential, and make a country’s debt portfolio more
resilient to future shocks.
The pandemic might be the force that catalyzes long overdue
innovation in sovereign debt instruments that could facilitate
restructurings and even help avoid them in the future.
COVID-19’s huge economic shock finds about half of low-income
countries and several emerging markets already in or at high risk of a
debt crisis. And sovereign debt levels are expected to rise, by about 17
percent of GDP in advanced economies; 12 percent in emerging markets;
and 8 percent in low-income countries, compared to pre-pandemic
expectations. The COVID-19 crisis has also ushered in a period of great
macroeconomic uncertainty. In this situation, the prospects for a
sovereign’s ongoing ability to service its debt are more uncertain than
at any other juncture, potentially making creditors less willing to
accept a permanently diminished claim.
Prolonged negotiations, lack of market access and high uncertainty
during a restructuring can deprive nations of desperately needed funds
for an extended period, reducing priority spending and investments
required to grow the economy and allow the country to service its debts.
In trying to avoid this downward spiral, some governments may be
tempted to accept unfavorable restructuring terms that end up triggering
the same problems again in a short space of time.
Contingency plan
The pandemic might be the force that catalyzes long overdue
innovation in the sovereign debt market. This could facilitate less
protracted and simpler restructurings, and help avoid them in the
future.
Debt instruments that adjust payouts to creditors according to (or
“contingent on”) the sovereign’s future health—measured by GDP, exports,
or commodity prices—could help break this negative cycle. In an
economic slowdown, these “state-contingent debt instruments” would
maintain debt relief that a country obtained in a restructuring. In an
upswing, they would automatically provide additional compensation to
creditors as the country’s ability to pay improves.
This commitment may allow the country to reach agreement on a larger
cut of its debt burden upfront and make it more sustainable going
forward, particularly as it regains quicker market access. Further
designing a symmetric instrument offering larger relief in a downside
scenario could permit agreement to be reached around a more favorable
baseline, providing value recovery for investors and downside protection
to the country.
Implementation challenges
Despite the appeal of state-contingent debt instruments in these
uncertain times, longstanding implementation difficulties remain and
their design needs to incorporate lessons from experience. Creditors
have historically discounted these instruments given their untested
nature, idiosyncratic risk profiles, and resultant lack of trading
liquidity. Such concerns can be addressed by tying state variables, such
as GDP growth or commodity prices, closely to the debtors’ repayment
capacity and ensuring that the measurement of state variables is
shielded from data manipulation.
Wider usage and standardization of terms would allow investors to
understand state-contingent contracts better, provide better price
formation and foster trading in the secondary market. To address
borrowers’ concerns, the payout formula should be transparent and
provide countercyclical relief, while also capping excessive payouts.
Hurricane insurance
Restructurings can also enhance a country’s debt portfolio resilience
by including insurance-like clauses that provide relief when
shocks—such as hurricanes or other natural disasters—strike. Lenders
have been willing to provide hurricane insurance to some Caribbean
countries in the form of interest forbearance and maturity extension.
Such clauses enhance a country’s repayment capacity at the time of
crisis, benefitting both sides. A restructuring offers a unique chance
to exchange the entire debt stock for new securities with these
mechanisms, keeping all creditors on equal footing.
An even more ambitious goal would be the development of instruments
that could prompt automatic debt standstills in a global crisis (like
the current pandemic), helping developing countries cope with an
unexpectedly large shock. However, defining an appropriate triggering
event remains difficult. One possibility is to link future private
sector debt standstills to official sector standstills, as this would
serve as an appropriately strong indication of the severity of the
crisis.
State-contingent debt instruments can be useful in certain
situations. But they are no panacea for the inherent challenges of a
sovereign debt restructuring. Other comprehensive reforms are needed, as detailed in other recent research
on strengthening debt architecture. Optimizing their design in light of
past experience may allow contingent instruments to play an important
role in facilitating speedier and less costly debt restructurings, while
making countries more resilient against future shocks. Now is the time
to tackle this challenge.
IMF
© International Monetary Fund
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