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ID158683
Title ProperFinancial data transparency, international institutions, and sovereign borrowing costs
LanguageENG
AuthorHallerberg, Mark ;  Gandrud, Christopher ;  Mark Copelovitch Christopher Gandrud Mark Hallerberg ;  Copelovitch, Mark
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recent events in international finance illustrate the close connection between the viability of a country's major private financial institutions and the sustainability of its sovereign debt. We explore the precise nature of this connection and the ways in which it shapes investors’ expectations of sovereign creditworthiness. We consider how investors use the overall level of information available about the private financial sector—and the potential risks it poses to government finances—when making decisions about investing in sovereign debt. We expect that governments providing more information about the private financial sector will have lower, and less volatile, borrowing costs. In order to test this argument, we create a new Financial Data Transparency (FDT) Index measuring governments’ willingness to release credible financial system data. Using the FDT and a sample of high-income OECD countries, we find that such transparency reduces sovereign borrowing costs. The effects are conditional on the level of public indebtedness. Transparent countries with low debt enjoy lower and less volatile borrowing costs.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 62, No.1; Mar 2018: p.23–41
Journal SourceInternational Studies Quarterly Vol: 62 No 1
Key WordsInternational Institutions ;  Financial Data Transparency ;  Sovereign Borrowing Costs


 
 
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