What Has Been the Impact of COVID-19 on Debt? Turning a Wave into a Tsunami

Year
2021
Type(s)
Author(s)
M. Ayhan Kose, Peter Nagle, Franziska Ohnsorge, and Naotaka Sugawara
Source
World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 9871, World Bank, Washington, DC. November 2021
Url
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/801991638297695658/What-Has-Been-the-Impact-of-COVID-19-on-Debt-Turning-a-Wave-into-a-Tsunami

This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of the impact of COVID-19 on debt, puts recent debt developments and prospects in historical context, and analyzes new policy challenges associated with debt resolution. The paper reports three main results. First, even before the pandemic, a rapid buildup of debt in emerging market and developing economies—dubbed the “fourth wave” of debt—had been underway. Because of the sharp increase in debt during the pandemic-induced global recession of 2020, the fourth wave of debt has turned into a tsunami and become even more dangerous. Second, five years after past global recessions, global government debt continued to increase. In light of this historical record, and given large financing gaps and significant investment needs in many countries, debt levels will likely continue to rise in the near future. Third, debt resolution has become more complicated because of a highly fragmented creditor base, a lack of transparency in debt reporting, and a legacy stock of government debt without collective action clauses. National policy makers and the global community need to act rapidly and forcefully ensure that the fourth wave does not end with a string of debt crises in emerging market and developing economies as earlier debt waves did.

Brookings Institution Future Development blog (“Debt Tsunami of the Pandemic,” December 17, 2021).

Brookings Institution Future Development blog (“Does Government Debt Increase after Global Recessions?” December 17, 2021).

Also released as:

CAMA Working Paper 99/2021, Australian National University, Canberra
CEPR Discussion Paper 16775, Centre for Economic Policy Research, London
MPRA Paper 110897, Munich University Library, Munich