Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the...

50
Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future spot exchange rate What makes a currency risky? The gains from international diversification The portfolio balance model Appendix 1: Intervention in the FX Market Lecture 25: Sovereign Risk Sovereign spreads Appendix 2: Greece & the euro’s debt crisis ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

description

Is the interest differential an unbiased predictor of the future spot exchange rate? Usual finding: No. Bias is statistically significant: (i-i*) t ≠ E t Δs t+1.. – In fact, E t Δs t+1 is much closer to zero (a random walk). – The bias supports the “carry trade”: One can make money, on average, going short in a low-i currency and long in a high-i currency. How can this be? – One interpretation: Rational expectations fails, Δs t e ≠ E t Δs t+1 – Another: Uncovered interest parity fails, i-i* t ≠ Δs t e ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel A risk premium separates (i-i*) t from Δs t e. In this case, riskier currencies should be the ones to pay higher returns.

Transcript of Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the...

Page 1: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk• Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification

• Bias in the forward exchange marketas a predictor of the future spot exchange rate

• What makes a currency risky?• The gains from international diversification• The portfolio balance model• Appendix 1: Intervention in the FX Market

• Lecture 25: Sovereign Risk• Sovereign spreads• Appendix 2: Greece & the euro’s debt crisis• Appendix 3: Procyclical fiscal policy

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 2: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Does the Forward Market Offer an Unbiased Predictor of the Future Spot Exchange Rate?

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

• More particularly, does the forward discount equal the mathematically expected percentage change in the spot rate:

(fd)t = Et Δst+1 ?

• Given Covered Interest Parity, it is the same as the question whether the interest differential is an unbiased predictor:

(i-i*)t = Et Δst+1 ?

• So then, does the interest differential equal the math-ematically expected percentage change in the spot rate?

Page 3: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Is the interest differential an unbiased predictor of the future spot exchange rate?

• Usual finding: No. Bias is statistically significant: (i-i*)t ≠ Et Δst+1 ..

– In fact, Et Δst+1 is much closer to zero (a random walk).

– The bias supports the “carry trade”:One can make money, on average, going short in a low-i currency and long in a high-i currency.

• How can this be?

– One interpretation: Rational expectations fails, Δste ≠ EtΔst+1

– Another: Uncovered interest parity fails, i-i*t ≠ Δste

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

A risk premium separates (i-i*)t from Δste

.In this case, riskier currencies should be the ones to pay higher returns.

Page 4: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

What makes a currency risky to a portfolio investor?

• If uncertainty regarding the value of the currency (variance) is high.

• If you already holds a lot of assets in that currency.

• If currency is highly correlated with other assets you hold. What matters is how much risk the currency adds to your overall portfolio.ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 5: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

The gains from international diversification

• James Tobin: The theory of optimal portfolio diversification

• “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.”

• The theory was worked out for stocks in the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM).

• Applies to all assets: bonds, equities; domestic, foreign.

• International markets offer a particular opportunity for diversification, because they move independently to some extent.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 6: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

What portfolio allocation minimizes risk?

• Assume 2 assets (e.g., domestic & foreign),– each with probability ½ of earning -1, ½ of earning +1.– Variance of overall portfolio ≡ Et (overall returnt+1)2

– Assume the 2 assets are uncorrelated.

• If entire portfolio allocated to 1st asset, – Variance = ½ (-1)2 + ½ (+1)2 = 1.

• If entire portfolio allocated to 2nd asset, – Variance = ½ (-1)2 + ½ (+1)2 = 1.

• If portfolio is allocated half to 1st asset & half to 2nd,– Variance = ¼(-1)2 + (½)(0)2 + ¼ (+1)2 = ½ . – That’s minimum-variance. Maximum diversification.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 7: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Diversification lowers risk to the overall portfolio.

The investor can achieve a lower level of risk by diversifying internationally.

Standarddeviationof return to portfolio

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 8: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Investors want to minimize riskand maximize expected return.

• To get them to hold assets that add risk to the portfolio, you have to offer them a higher expected return.

• That is why stocks pay a higher expected return than treasury bills.

• Do foreign assets pay a higher expected return than domestic assets?

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 9: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Placing 20% of your portfolio abroad reduces risk (diversification).After that point, the motive for going abroad is higher expected return;

investors who are more risk averse won’t go much further.

Risk →

↑ Return

Medium risk- aversion

High risk-aversion

Low risk- aversion

Purely US

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 10: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Similarly, putting 25%of the global portfolio

in emerging markets gives diversification.

Risk →

↑ Return

After that, the gainin expected return

comes at the expenseof higher risk.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 11: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

The Portfolio Balance Model• Portfolio investors should allocate shares in their portfolios

to countries’ assets as: - a decreasing function of the asset’s risk, and - an increasing function of its expected rate of return (risk premium).

• Valuation effect: a 1% increase in supply of $ assets (whether in the form of money or not) can be offset by a 1% depreciation, -- so that portfolio share is unchanged, and -- therefore no need to increase expected return to attract demand.

• Another implication: => FX intervention can have an effect even if sterilized.

• One implication: As its debt grows, a deficit country will eventually experience depreciation of its currency, or its interest rate will be forced up, or both.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 12: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Sovereign Risk• In the past, sovereign risk (i.e., risk of default by governments)

was normally assumed zero for major borrowers • such as the US, Japan, Euroland.

– Then bonds are identified only by currency of denomination,• and “risk” is just exchange risk.

• But default risk was always an issue for developing countries.• Assets are identified not just by currency, but also by the issuer;• risk also includes default risk, requiring its own risk premium

– “sovereign spread.”• Recently

– European countries moved back into that situation,– especially those with very high debt, like Greece.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 13: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Sovereign spreads depend on general sensitivity to risk, as reflected in the VIX (option-implied volatility of US stock market)

Laura Jaramillo & Catalina Michelle Tejada, IMF Working Paper, March 2011

Page 14: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Capital flows to Emerging Markets and risk-sensitivity as measured by VIX

1990-2013

19901991

19921993

19941995

19961997

19981999

20002001

20022003

20042005

20062007

20082009

20102011

20122013

20142015

0

1

2

3

4

5 10

20

30

40

Private Capital Flows to EMs as % of GDP (left axis) Volatility Index (right axis)

Capi

tal F

low

s to

EMs a

s % o

f GDP

Vola

tilty

Inde

x

Notes: Data on private capital flows from IMF's IFS database, Dec. 2013. Capital flows are private financial flows to emerging markets & developing economies. Volatility index measured by the Chicago Board's VIX or VXO at end of period. 2013 data are estimates.

Source: Kristin Forbes, 2014

Page 15: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Sovereign spreads depend on country-specific characteristics,

• including: the country’s debt/GDP ratio,

• whether the ratio is expected to come down in the future (the definition of sustainability),

• whether the country has a past reputation for defaulting (“debt intolerance”),

• and whether somebody is expected to bail it out(=> moral hazard).

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 16: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Ratio of public debt to GDP among advanced countriesis the highest since the end of WW II

Source: Carlo Cotarelli “Making Goldilocks Happy,” IMF, Apr. 20, 2012

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 17: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

After joining the euro, Greece never got its budget deficit below the 3% of GDP limit of the Stability & Growth Pact,

nor did the debt ever decline toward the 60% limit

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 18: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Spreads for Greece, Portugal & periphery members of the € converged to Germany’s when joining the euro, 2001-07,

ITF220 - Prof.J.FrankelMarket Nighshift Nov. 16, 2011

Given the high debts, the ECB must have been seen as standing behind them.

until they shot up in 2008-11 under fears of sovereign default risk.

Page 19: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

APPENDICES1. FX intervention

2. Greece & the € crisis3. Pro-cyclical fiscal policy

Page 20: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

APPENDIX 1: Intervention in the $ foreign exchange market

• was effective in 1985, to bring down the $, represented by the G-5 agreement at the Plaza Hotel;

• and was effective at times subsequently (though not always).

• Since 2001, the ECB, Fed, & BoJ have intervened very little;• But other floaters intervene more often,

– e.g., major emerging market countries,

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 21: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

US FX intervention, even though sterilized, can sometimes be effective: The Plaza Accord of 1985 brought the dollar down,

and the G-7 meeting of 1995 brought it up.

1985-1999

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 22: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

APPENDIX 2: Greece & the Euro Crisis

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Based on presentation in Academic Consultants Meetingto the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Washington DC

Page 23: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Three structural drawbacks are built into the monetary union:

• (I) The competitiveness problem, – which arises from the inability of members to devalue (& loosen money),– thoroughly anticipated by “Optimum Currency Area” warnings.– A case of the OCA problem: Euro periphery needed tighter monetary policy

than the ECB’s during 1999-2007, and needs looser today.

• (II) The fiscal problem, in particular, moral hazard,– which arises from keeping fiscal policy primarily at the national level. – It was well-anticipated by architects of Maastricht.

• Pushed by German taxpayers afraid they’d have to bail out Club Med,• they produced Maastricht criteria, No Bailout Clause, SGP, & successors.• All failed, from day 1.

– Greece was the worst example.

• (III) The banking problem, – which arises from keeping bank supervision at the national level.– It received very little discussion at Maastricht.– Example: Ireland’s bank credit was excessive. Bank crisis became debt crisis.

Overviews: Shambaugh (2012) “The Euro’s Three Crises” & Lane (2012) "The European Sovereign Debt Crisis" 

23

Page 24: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

(I) The Competitiveness Problem (1999-2013)During the euro’s first decade, 1999-2009, wages & ULCs

rose faster in the periphery than in Germany.

1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 201390

100

110

120

130

140

150

160Nominal Unit Labor Costs (1999=100)

Italy Ireland

France Austria

Spain Euro area

Portugal Greece

Germany

From: Rémi Bourgeot, Fondation Robert Schuman. Source: Ameco, EC.

Page 25: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Big current account deficits in periphery countries up to 2008 were seen as benign reflections of optimizing capital

flows, instead of as warning signals.

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10 Current Account (% GDP)

Germany Ireland

Italy Portugal

Greece Spain

France

Source: Rémi Bourgeot, Fondation Robert SchumanData: IMF WEO (October 2014)

Page 26: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

• Although many Emerging Market countries learned lessons from the sovereign debt crises of the 1980s & 1990s, e.g., how to run countercyclical fiscal policy, leaders in euroland failed to do so.

• They thought a sovereign debt crisis could never happen to them.

– even after the periphery countriesviolated the deficit & debt ceilings of Maastricht and the SGP.

(II) THE FISCAL PROBLEM

Page 27: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Possible paths forward in the 3 areas of crisis

• (I) The competitiveness problem: – The periphery must tough out internal devaluations.

• (II) The fiscal problem:– Germany is right about moral hazard (in LR),

but wrong about “expansionary fiscal austerity” (in SR).

• (III) The banking problem: – Encouraging moves in 2012, toward a banking union.

27

Page 28: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Pro-cyclical fiscal policy in Greece:expansion in 2000-08, contraction in 2010-12

28

Source: IMF, 2011.I. Diwan, PED401, Oct. 2011

Page 29: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

When PASOK leader George Papandreou became PM in Oct. 2009,

• he announced – that “foul play” had misstated the fiscal statistics

under the previous government:

– the 2009 budget deficit ≠ 3.7%, as previously claimed, but > 12.7 % !

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 30: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Missed opportunity

• The EMU elites had to know that someday a member country would face a debt crisis.

• In early 2010 they should have viewed Greece as a good opportunity to set a precedent for moral hazard:– The fault egregiously lay with Greece itself.

• Unlike Ireland or Spain, which had done much right.

– It is small enough that the damage from debt restructuring could have been contained at that time.

• They should have applied the familiar IMF formula: serious bailout, but only conditional on serious policy reforms & serious Private Sector Involvement.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Page 31: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

As one could have predicted, fiscal contraction is contractionary

Source: P.Krugman

Causality could go the other way: more austerity prescribed for the worst-hit countries.

Page 32: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

The bigger the fiscal contraction, the bigger the GDP loss relative to what had been officially forecast

Europe: Growth Forecast Errors vs. Fiscal Consolidation Forecasts

Note: Figure plots forecast error for real GDP growth in 2010 and 2011 relative to forecasts made in the spring of 2010 on forecasts of fiscal consolidation for 2010 and 2011 made in spring of year 2010; and regression line.

Source: Olivier Blanchard & Daniel Leigh, 2014, “Learning about Fiscal Multipliers from Growth Forecast Errors,” fig.1, IMF Economic Review 62, 179–212.

=> true multipliers > than multipliers that IMF had been using.

Page 33: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

(II) The periphery countries had by 2013 managed to reverse much of the run-up in costs

(except Italy)

Source: Jeffrey Anderson & Jessica Stallings, “Euro Area Periphery: Crisis Eased But Not Over,” IIF 2/13/14.

Page 34: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

But periphery economies remain weak

Source: Jeffrey Anderson and Jessica Stallings, Feb. 13, 2014, “Euro Area Periphery: Crisis Eased But Not Over,” Institute of International Finance, Chart 3

Page 35: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Unemployment in the periphery remains high

Source: Jeffrey Anderson and Jessica Stallings, Feb. 13, 2014 , “Euro Area Periphery: Crisis Eased But Not Over,” Institute of International Finance, Chart 1

Page 37: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Adjustment in the periphery is that much harder when eurozone-wide inflation < 1%.

37

Page 38: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

As a result of austerity, debt/GDP ratios continued to rise sharply. Declining GDP outweighed progress on reduction of budget deficits.

.

19901991

19921993

19941995

19961997

19981999

20002001

20022003

20042005

20062007

20082009

20102011

20122013

20142015

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200 Public Debt (% GDP)

France Germany

Greece Ireland

Italy Portugal

Spain

From Rémi Bourgeot, Fondation Robert SchumanData source: IMF WEO (October 2014).

Page 39: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Comparisons with the US monetary union are useful.

• (I) Regarding loss of monetary independence: – Prospective € members did not satisfy OCA criteria

among themselves as well as the 50 American states do: • trade, symmetry of shocks, labor mobility, market flexibility,

& countercyclical cross-state fiscal transfers.• Endogenous change in these parameters has been insufficient.

• (II) Regarding moral hazard from states’ fiscal policy:– The US federal government bailed out no state after 1790 – and nobody expects it to do so now.– How did the US vanquish state-level moral hazard?

39

Page 40: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

The secret US ingredient is especially relevant for Merkel’s recent reforms to give enforceability

& credibility to the eurozone targets for deficits & debt, after the repeated earlier failures of the SGP.

• The Fiscal Compact is technically in effect, as of 2013.

• It sets deficit targets stricter than the SGP, • though at least they are specified in cyclically adjusted terms.

• Countries must put the euro-wide targets into their national laws.

• As rationale, some point to fiscal rules among the 50 states.– Do they explain the absence of moral hazard in the US?

– Or is it the way spreads on the debts of spendthrift states rise, • long before debt/income ratios reach anything like European levels?

– The fundamental explanation: The decision to let 8 states default in 1841-42 rather than bail them out was a critical precedent. 40

Page 41: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

The EU leaders should have reacted to the Greek debt crisis as Washington reacted to the southern states’ crisis in 1841.

• When the crisis erupted in Athens in late 2009, Frankfurt & Brussels should have seen it as a golden opportunity.

• They already knew their attempted fiscal constraints had failed. – So even the leaders must have known that sometime

during the euro’s life it would be challenged by debt troubles among one or more members.

– It was important to get the first case right, to set the correct precedent. 41

Frankel, “The Greek debt crisis: The ECB’s three big mistakes,” VoxEU, May 16, 2011.

Page 42: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

The EU should have reacted to the Greek crisis as Washington reacted in 1841.

• Greece was the ideal test case, for two reasons: – 1) Unlike Ireland or Spain, it was egregiously at fault,

• a natural place to draw a line, its creditors the natural ones to suffer losses.

– 2) Unlike Italy, it was small enough that other governments and systemically important banks could have been protected from the consequences of a default,

• at a fraction of the cost of the EFSF, ESM, etc.

• In early 2010 the EC & ECB should have urged Greece to go to the IMF and, if necessary, to restructure its debts, – rather than calling this course “unthinkable.” – The odds of containing the fire would have been far better than later.

42Frankel, “The Greek debt crisis: The ECB’s three big mistakes,” VoxEU, May 16, 2011.

Page 43: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Question: “In the current environment, how should monetary policy operate…?”

• The ECB should ease monetary policy

• => higher inflation rates & depreciation.

• Will help Club Med improve its relative price competitiveness.

• German horror is understandable; – they are entitled to their “morality tale.”

• But if the euro is to survive, the Germans must give way on some things that they very deliberately did not sign up for at the start. – They especially must give way on the absurd premise that

austerity is expansionary, as if we learned nothing from the 1930s.

• The ECB has already moved in the right direction under Draghi, – LTROs & OMTs– “We will do what it takes.”– And now QE in 2015.

43

Page 44: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

Question: “Can the monetary union be achieved in the long run without a significant increase in fiscal unity?”

Full fiscal union? No. The German taxpayers who were afraid that the euro would

lead to a fiscal bailout were proven right (and the elites proven wrong). Why should they believe

that there will be no future bailouts? 44

No. “More Europe” is now inescapable.In the medium run, debt/GDP ratios

must be put back on a sustainable path through write-downs of “legacy debt,” “re-profiling,”

financial repression, bank bailouts, EFSF, ESM, ECB, etc.

Question: “Is fiscal unity politically possible?”

Page 45: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

LTROs -- Dec.2011 & Feb.2012

“Within our mandate, the ECB is ready

to do whatever it takes to

preserve the euro.

And believe me, it will be

enough.” – July 2012

The financial situation improved after Nov. 2011, when Mario Draghi became ECB President.

Spreads came back down.

Page 46: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

APPENDIX 3: Pro-cyclical fiscal policy

THESE 3 PAGES WERE IN L3 APP. IN 2010

• In the textbook approach, benevolent governments are supposed use discretionary fiscal (& monetary) policy to dampen cyclical fluctuations.

• expanding at times of excess supply, and• contracting at times of excess demand.

• In practice, policy has often been procyclical, i.e., destabilizing, in developing countries.

Page 47: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

ITF220 - Prf.J.Frankel

• #2: Procyclical government spending– Due, e.g., to commodity cycle

• Dutch Disease in commodity booms,• and the need to retrench in downturns.

– Bias toward optimism in official forecasts.

Political economy explanations for destabilizing fiscal policy

• #1 : Political Budget Cycles– Politicians expand just before elections, so that

rapid growth will buy votes; the cost comes later (debt, inflation, reserve loss, devaluation)

– Example: The Mexican sexenio (until 2000)– Do politicians really fool voters this way? Yes, for awhile.

Page 48: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

48ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

Historic role reversal in the cyclicality of fiscal policy in industrialized vs. developing countries

Previously, fiscal policy was procyclicalin developing countries:

• Governments would raise spending in booms;• and then be forced to cut back in downturns.

• Especially Latin American commodity-producers.

Page 49: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

49ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

• An important development -- some developing countries, were able to break the historic pattern in the most recent decade:– taking advantage of the boom of 2002-2008

• to run budget surpluses & build up reserves,

– thereby earning the ability to expand fiscally in the 2008-09 global recession.

The procyclicality of fiscal policy, cont.

Page 50: Lectures 24 & 25: Portfolio Risk Lecture 24: Risk Premium & Portfolio Diversification Bias in the forward exchange market as a predictor of the future.

ITF220 - Prof.J.Frankel

What determines countries’ fiscal performance?

– Fundamentally: Quality of institutions.– This does not mean “tough” rules, if they lack enforceability –

like SGP, debt ceiling or Balanced Budget Amendment.

– Better would be structural budget targets (Swiss) with forecasts from independent experts (Chile).

– Since 2000, while some developing countries have graduated from pro-cyclical spending to countercyclical,

– the US, UK & euro countries have seemingly forgotten how to run countercyclical fiscal policy.

• They instead enacted higher spending & tax cuts in the expansion & contraction after the recession hit.