- +10
Rosa Balfour, Frances Z. Brown, Yasmine Farouk, …
{
"authors": [
"Moisés Naím"
],
"type": "legacyinthemedia",
"centerAffiliationAll": "",
"centers": [
"Carnegie Endowment for International Peace",
"Carnegie Europe"
],
"collections": [],
"englishNewsletterAll": "",
"nonEnglishNewsletterAll": "",
"primaryCenter": "Carnegie Endowment for International Peace",
"programAffiliation": "",
"programs": [],
"projects": [],
"regions": [
"Western Europe",
"France",
"Germany",
"Europe",
"North America"
],
"topics": [
"Economy",
"EU"
]
}Source: Getty
How to Climb Out?
As Europe struggles to pull out of its current financial crisis, it is useful to look back at the five most common tactics that countries have historically used to climb out of debt.
Source: El Pais

When prediction becomes so difficult, it is good to take a look at the past; even in the knowledge that the past is not always a reliable guide for guessing about the future. But an analysis of a large number of financial crises of this type has enabled Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, in This Time is Different, their magnificent book on "eight centuries of financial folly," to identify the five most common tactics that debtor countries have used to climb out of their indebtedness.
1) Grow. Expand the economy. Fiscal revenue thus increases; the weight of debt diminishes. Many countries have tried this; few have succeeded.
2) Stop paying. In more technical language this is called debt restructuring, or default. In practice, it is just the raw notification that countries give to their creditors that they will pay less than they owe, and over a longer term than they had initially promised. Reinhart finds that, since its independence in 1832, Greece has been in default 48 percent of the time. Argentina is also a frequent deployer of this tactic.
3) Austerity. This is a word as painfully familiar now to Europeans as it was in the 1990s to Latin Americans, Russians and Asians. It means Draconian cutbacks in public spending, both in the superfluous and in what is less so. It reduces debt, but brings protestors out in the street, and can bring down governments.
4) Inflation. When prices rise, the value of debt in that currency diminishes in line with the rate of inflation. Inflation is bad for the economy, especially for wage-earners, and alleviates the debt problem in a less politically strident way, but does not solve the problem of debt in other currencies.
5) Financial repression. This occurs when governments channel toward themselves funds which would otherwise go to other purposes, or exit from the economy. The range of measures is tempting, dangerous and... frequently used. They include limits on the interest rates paid by the government, the obligation for banks to use public debt as part of their reserves, the nationalization of all or part of the banking industry, and controls on the free international flow of capital. It sounds extreme, and is. But it was in vogue in the less developed countries from the 1960s to the 80s. Reinhart, who suspects that measures of this sort may come back into fashion, points out that they were also common in the United States and other developed countries between 1945 and 1980, and were essential in helping to liquidate the debts accumulated in World War II.
None of these five tactics excludes the others. In particular, inflation and financial repression often go together.
Again, I don't know how this crisis will evolve. But the ideas in this book do help to visualize what lies behind many of the stories now in the news.
About the Author
Distinguished Fellow
Moisés Naím is a distinguished fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a best-selling author, and an internationally syndicated columnist.
- The World Reacts to Biden’s First 100 DaysResearch
- View From Latin AmericaCommentary
Moisés Naím
Recent Work
Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.
More Work from Carnegie China
- How China’s Growth Model Determines Its Climate PerformanceCommentary
Rather than climate ambitions, compatibility with investment and exports is why China supports both green and high-emission technologies.
Mathias Larsen
- What’s New about Involution?Commentary
“Involution” is a new word for an old problem, and without a very different set of policies to rein it in, it is a problem that is likely to persist.
Michael Pettis
- The Chinese Investment Riddle: What Cities RevealCommentary
While China's investment story seems contradictory from the outside, the real answers to Beijing's high-quality growth ambitions are hiding in plain sight across the nation's cities.
Yuhan Zhang
- Using China’s Central Government Balance Sheet to “Clean up” Local Government Debt Is a Bad IdeaCommentary
China's stimulus addiction cannot go on forever. Beijing still has policy space to clean up the country's massive debt issue, but time is running short.
Michael Pettis
- Why China Should Revalue the Renminbi—And Why It Can’t Easily Do SoCommentary
A quick look at the complexities behind Beijing’s enduring Catch-22 situation with revaluing the Renminbi, despite advantages of a stronger currency.
Michael Pettis