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2020 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

GDP-Linked Bonds: A Proposal Worth Looking Into

Author : Riccardo Barbieri Hermitte

Published in: Capitalism, Global Change and Sustainable Development

Publisher: Springer International Publishing

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Abstract

GDP-linked bonds (GLBs) have been the subject of recurrent debates among economists and financial market participants but no major debt office has so far decided to launch them. Issuers remain skeptical about the practical feasibility or desirability of these securities, citing potentially high risk premia and various technical issues, including GDP data integrity and revisions, moral hazard and adverse selection. Against this backdrop, we discuss the key features of these securities and we argue that technical difficulties can be resolved, especially if standardized terms are agreed at the international level and statistical offices agree to publish dedicated GDP series. From the standpoint of investors, GLBs would provide direct exposure to GDP growth of a country or basket of countries without running into the more complex valuation issues that characterize equities. Long-dated GLBs also have the interesting feature that their duration may offset the impact of changes in GDP growth expectations. For issuers, regular issuance of long-dated GLBs would gradually raise the share of liabilities indexed to GDP. In the event of a major economic downturn, the debt-to-GDP ratio would rise more moderately than if all debt consisted of conventional bonds. In the limit case of GLBs accounting for the whole stock of public debt and without a price floor, the debt-to-GDP ratio would not change at all apart from the cyclical change in the budget balance.

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Footnotes
1
Key findings are summarized in OECD (2018).
 
2
See the Executive Board Assessment in IMF (2017).
 
3
See for instance Benford et al. (2016), Blanchard et al. (2016), Carnot and Pamies Sumner (2017), Kopf (2017), Manna (2017). Earlier contributions include Borensztein and Mauro (2004).
 
4
ICMA (2017).
 
5
In EU countries, annual GDP data typically become ‘final’ after 2 years, frequently leading to significant revisions to the quarterly series. If one assumes that the final annual data are the ‘true’ level of GDP, the quarterly estimates that are available say, 4 months after the end of a quarter, should still be viewed as preliminary, which can lead to significant errors. It is thus important to balance out these errors over time (if one assumes that the estimation method does not suffer from systematic errors).
 
6
For long-term forecast see European Commission (2018); for the 2018–2019 forecast European Commission (2017).
 
7
The introduction of GLBs would provide a strong stimulus to research on long-term GDP growth forecasting. The most common approach is to use a production-function method to estimate long-term real GDP growth and add to it an inflation (or GDP deflator) forecast broadly consistent with the central bank’s inflation target. The average growth rate of Germany’s GDP deflator in the 1999–2017 was 2.1%. A prudential forecast of Germany’s nominal GDP growth in the 2020–2040 period would thus be 3.2% (1.2 real plus 2.0 deflator growth).
 
Literature
go back to reference Benford, J., Best, T., & Joy, M. (2016). Sovereign GDP-linked bonds, financial stability paper no. 39, Bank of England, September. Benford, J., Best, T., & Joy, M. (2016). Sovereign GDP-linked bonds, financial stability paper no. 39, Bank of England, September.
go back to reference Blanchard, O., Mauro, P., & Acalin, J. (2016). The case for growth-indexed bonds in advanced economies today, Peterson Institute for International Economics, policy brief 16–2, February. Blanchard, O., Mauro, P., & Acalin, J. (2016). The case for growth-indexed bonds in advanced economies today, Peterson Institute for International Economics, policy brief 16–2, February.
go back to reference Borensztein, E., & Mauro, P. (2004). The case for GDP-indexed bonds. Economic Policy, 19(38), 165–216.CrossRef Borensztein, E., & Mauro, P. (2004). The case for GDP-indexed bonds. Economic Policy, 19(38), 165–216.CrossRef
go back to reference Carnot, N., & Pamies Sumner, S. (2017). GDP-linked bonds: Some simulations on EU countries. European Commission Discussion Paper 073, December 2017. Carnot, N., & Pamies Sumner, S. (2017). GDP-linked bonds: Some simulations on EU countries. European Commission Discussion Paper 073, December 2017.
go back to reference European Commission. (2017). European economic forecast, Autumn 2017. Institutional Paper 063, November 2017. European Commission. (2017). European economic forecast, Autumn 2017. Institutional Paper 063, November 2017.
go back to reference European Commission. (2018). The 2018 ageing report: Underlying assumptions and projection methodologies, European Economy 2018. European Commission. (2018). The 2018 ageing report: Underlying assumptions and projection methodologies, European Economy 2018.
go back to reference ICMA. (2017). Introduction to the London term sheet for a GDP-linked bond, 14 March 2017. ICMA. (2017). Introduction to the London term sheet for a GDP-linked bond, 14 March 2017.
go back to reference IMF. (2017). State-contingent debt instruments for sovereigns, IMF policy paper, May 2017. IMF. (2017). State-contingent debt instruments for sovereigns, IMF policy paper, May 2017.
go back to reference Kopf, C. (2017). The case for GDP-linked securities, presentation at BMCG meeting, 7 February 2017. Kopf, C. (2017). The case for GDP-linked securities, presentation at BMCG meeting, 7 February 2017.
go back to reference Manna, M. (2017). A formal introduction to GDP-indexed bonds, mimeo, 13 October 2017. Manna, M. (2017). A formal introduction to GDP-indexed bonds, mimeo, 13 October 2017.
go back to reference OECD. (2018). Sovereign borrowing outlook for OECD countries. OECD. (2018). Sovereign borrowing outlook for OECD countries.
Metadata
Title
GDP-Linked Bonds: A Proposal Worth Looking Into
Author
Riccardo Barbieri Hermitte
Copyright Year
2020
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-46143-0_5