2013
DOI: 10.1787/5k3ttg5c0026-en
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The Effect of Government Debt, External Debt and their Interaction on OECD Interest Rates

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
(13 reference statements)
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“…For every percentage point that the debt ratio exceeds a threshold of 75% of GDP, the fiscal risk premium applied to long-term interest rates increases by 2 basis points, with an additional increase of 2 basis points for every percentage point that the debt ratio exceeds 125% of GDP. 8 But an additional risk premium is related to any negative net international investment position, consistent with the findings of Lane and Milesi-Ferreti (2001), Rose (2010) and Turner and Spinelli (2013). For every percentage point increase in the ratio of net external debt to GDP, a premium of 2 basis points is applied to the long-term interest rate.…”
supporting
confidence: 71%
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“…For every percentage point that the debt ratio exceeds a threshold of 75% of GDP, the fiscal risk premium applied to long-term interest rates increases by 2 basis points, with an additional increase of 2 basis points for every percentage point that the debt ratio exceeds 125% of GDP. 8 But an additional risk premium is related to any negative net international investment position, consistent with the findings of Lane and Milesi-Ferreti (2001), Rose (2010) and Turner and Spinelli (2013). For every percentage point increase in the ratio of net external debt to GDP, a premium of 2 basis points is applied to the long-term interest rate.…”
supporting
confidence: 71%
“…For every percentage point increase in the ratio of net external debt to GDP, a premium of 2 basis points is applied to the long-term interest rate. 9 For creditor countries (positive net international investment position), there is no corresponding discount, consistent with the findings of Turner and Spinelli (2013). An exception is made for the United States: given the reserve status of its currency, and despite a significantly negative net international investment position, no risk premium is applied.…”
mentioning
confidence: 54%