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Lecture VI Country Risk Assessment Methodologies: the Qualitative , Structural Approach to Country Risk - The Macroeconomic Fundamentals -

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Lecture VI. Country Risk Assessment Methodologies: the Qualitative , Structural Approach to Country Risk - The Macroeconomic Fundamentals -. The Qualitative Approach. A robust qualitative approach leads to comprehensive country risk report that tackle the following six elements: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lecture VI

Lecture VI

Country Risk Assessment Methodologies: the Qualitative, Structural Approach to Country Risk

- The Macroeconomic Fundamentals -

Page 2: Lecture VI

The Qualitative Approach

A robust qualitative approach leads to comprehensive country risk report that tackle the following six elements:

Social and welfare dimension of the development strategy;

Macroeconomic fundamentals; External indebtedness evolution, structure

and burden; Domestic financial system situation; Assessments of the governance and

transparency issues; Evaluation of the political stability.

Page 3: Lecture VI

Global GDP Contraction

Page 4: Lecture VI
Page 5: Lecture VI

Country-Specific Economic risk Macroeconomic Risks:

• Inflation and Hyperinflation;• Exchange rate;• Terms of Trade;• Debt Service.

Page 6: Lecture VI

GDP in value and in volume

Page 7: Lecture VI

The Inflation Rate

Inflation = increase in the general level of prices; How to measure inflation?

Consumer Price Index; Producer’s input and output prices Index; GDP deflator.

Causes of Inflation: Demand Pull the Economic Cycle! Supply Shocks;

OPEC I (1970s) oil prices from 3$ a barrel to 11.65$;

OPEC II (1980s) over 36$ a barrel; Nowdays.

Page 8: Lecture VI

The Inflation Rate (2)

Page 9: Lecture VI

The Inflation Rate (3)

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The Cost of Inflation

Real Interest Rate; Inflation tax; Menu costs; Relative Price VS General Price Level ↓

Economic Efficiency; Volatitlity of Inflation:

Reduces investment; Income Redistribution.

Nominal Illusion.

Page 11: Lecture VI

Deflation

DEF: Decrease in the general level of prices Japan since 1999

The Cost of Deflation: Effect on Real Interest Rate, Savings

and Investment; Effect on the real burden of debt.

Page 12: Lecture VI

Hyperinflation

Inflation is running at more than 50% at month;

CAUSE: large fiscal deficit that, without tax or bond issues, led govs to finance their activities through the inflation tax and by printing money.

Unless the gov reforms its fiscal position it has to print money and create inflation.

It has origin in fiscal policy (government’s decision about spending and taxation) and not monetary policy (gov’s decision for investing and loaning money);

Page 13: Lecture VI

Hyperinflation (2)

WHERE: Latin America and Central East Europe (1920s and 1914-1918);

Government issues to finance the debt: Hungary = 48%; Poland = 62%; Germany = 88%.

End of Hyperfinflation when: New currency issue; Fiscal reform; Return to fiscal surplus; Establishment of an indipendent central bank

ignore the demand of the fiscal authority!

Page 14: Lecture VI

The Qualitative Approach

Country-Specific Economic risk Macroeconomic Risks:

• Inflation and Hyperinflation;• Exchange rate;• Terms of Trade;• Debt Service.

Page 15: Lecture VI

Exchange Rate

Types of Exch rates: Bilateral and effective Exch rate Nominal VS real Exch rate.

Nominal Exchange rate determinats: CIP UIP Risk Adverse Investor

Currency Crisis and the Exchange Rate System

Page 16: Lecture VI

Exchange Rate: different Types

BILATERAL: rate at which you can swap the money of one country for that of another: Indirect Approach: how many yen

(amount foreign currency) to get 1$ (unit of local currency);

Example: yen*/dollar = 93.01 yen Devaluation if we need less yen to buy 1$

the value of the ER decreases; Appreciation if we need more yen to buy

1$ the value of the ER increases;

Page 17: Lecture VI

Exchange Rate: different Types (2)

Direct Approach: how many dollar (amount local currency) to get 1 yen (unit of foreign currency)!

Example: dollar/yen*=0.0107 $; Devaluation if we need more dollar to buy

1yen the value of the ER increase; Appreciation if we need less dollar to buy

1yen the value of the ER decreases. We would follow the INDIRECT

APPROACH!

Page 18: Lecture VI

Exchange Rate: different Types (3)

EFFECTIVE: measure the average appreciation/depreciation of a currency in comparison to different countries! Trade weighted basis (see charts pag

498); EX: Jap yen appreciate by 1% against

the $ and 1% againt the Thai Baht and remain unchanged versus other currency = increase in the yen EER;

Usually expressed using an index = 100.

Page 19: Lecture VI

Exchange Rate: different Types (4)

NOMINAL ER: rate at which you can swap two currencies (as above);

REAL ER: how expensive commodities are in different countries and reflect the competitiveness of a country’s export.

Page 20: Lecture VI

Exchange Rate: different Types (5)

Example: Cup of coffee = 200 yen in JPN and 1$

in USA; Nominal Exchange rate = 100 yen per

$ (Yen/$); BUT real exchange rate = 0.5 you

can only buy half as much with your money in Japan as you can in the US;

Yen-US dollar RER is low! Goods in the US are cheaper than in Japan!

Page 21: Lecture VI

Exchange Rate: different Types (6)

RER is based on a basket of commodities and not just 1!!!

RER=NER * domestic price level overseas price level;

Example:- 1$ in US buy the same amount of goods as 3 pesos in

Argentina;- NER: 3 pesos/$ RER = 3 * 1US$/3pesos = 1If price increases in Argentina (1$ in US buy the same

amount of goods as 5 pesos in Argentina): RER = 3 * 1US$/5pesos = 0.6 i.e with 1$ in Argentina you can buy only the 60% of

goods that you could buy in US.

Page 22: Lecture VI

Nominal Exchange rates Determinants

Converted Interest Parity: Value of foreign investment (yen) in local

currency (dollar) at the end of the period:

Yen(1+r*)(F(0)/S(0))

S(0) = spot exchange rate (current exchange rate);

F(0) = forward exchange rate (exchange rate in the future) forward exchange rate is prefectly forecast in the CIP;

Page 23: Lecture VI

Nominal Exchange rates Determinants (2)

Equilibrium (i.e the investor is indifferent between yen and dollar investment):

Yen(1+r*)(F(0)/S(0)) = $(1+r) If we put F(0)/S(0) = 1+ fp Where fp is the forward premium (proportion

by which a country’s gorward exchange rate exceeds its spot rate) we get:

(1+iJPN)(1+fp) = (1 + iUSA) = iJPN - iUSA = fp OR iJPN +fp = iUS

i.e. as a result of arbritage, the return on the dollar investment will equal the return on the yen investment when evaluated using the forward rate!

Page 24: Lecture VI

Nominal Exchange rates Determinants (3)

Uncovered Interest Parity: The investor takes a risk because he doesn’t

cover his position by a forward transition F(0) = Se(1);

Expected Appreciation of the dollar = interest rate gap;

[Se(1) – S(0)]/S(0)=iJPN- iUS

What drives the Exhange rate? Change in the overseas interest rate; Change in the domestic interest rate; Change in expectation of the dollar.

Page 25: Lecture VI

Nominal Exchange rates Determinants (4)

Risk Adverse investor: Premium at risk; US return = iUS+expected dollar apprec = ijpn+ risk premium Change in the risk premium would

impact on the NER!

Page 26: Lecture VI

Reference

Bouchet, Clark and Groslambert (2003): “Country Risk Assessment”, Wiley finance (Chapter 4).

Colombo, E. and Lossani, M. (2009): “Economia dei Mercati Emergenti”, Carocci Editore.

Miles, D. and Schott, A. (2005): “Macroeconomics. Understanding the Wealth of Nations”, eds. Wiley (Chapter 11,19, 20).

The Economist (2009): “Guide to Economic Indicators. Making Sense of Economics”, eds. The Economist.