Brown, Martin; Lane, Philip R.
Description:
This paper assesses the extent to which
debt overhang poses a constraint to economic activity in
Emerging Europe, as the region emerges from the recent
financial and economic crisis. At the macroeconomic level,
it finds that the external imbalance problem for Emerging
Europe has been in most cases more one of flows (high
current account deficits in the pre-crisis years) rather
than large stocks of external debt. A high reliance on
equity funding means that net external debt is far lower
than net external liabilities. Domestic balance sheets have
expanded quite rapidly but sector liabilities remain
relatively low compared with advanced economies. With the
important exception of Hungary, public debt levels also
remain relatively low in Emerging Europe. At the
microeconomic level, the potential for debt overhang in the
corporate sector is limited to a few countries: Latvia,
Lithuania, Estonia, and Slovenia. Due to the low incidence
of household debt, hardly any country, except Estonia, seems
to face a threat of debt overhang in the household sector.
The strong increase in non-performing loans compared with
pre-crisis bank profitability suggests that debt overhang in
the banking sector is a threat in Ukraine, Latvia,
Lithuania, Hungary, Georgia, and Albania. Financial
integration of Emerging Europe seems to have contributed to
the transmission of the crisis to the region. At the same
time, this integration is helping the region in managing the
crisis by concerted actions of the major players.