Code for "Insufficient or Excessive Investment Under Sovereign Default Risk" JIE 2026

Published: 2 February 2026| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/fpfzd2gzf5.1
Contributors:
Ilhwan Song, Gabriel Mihalache

Description

Replication package for "Insufficient or Excessive Investment Under Sovereign Default Risk", Conditionally accepted at the Journal of International Economics Abstract: Private agents do not internalize the impact of their investment decisions on the sovereign’s bond prices and default risk. Therefore, a standard externality argument implies that investment is insufficient and that a subsidy can improve welfare, if financed by non-distortionary means. We contrast this logic with a countervailing force. When the sovereign is impatient relative to households, plausibly due to political economy factors, it finds laissez-faire capital accumulation excessive and might prefer instead to tax it. We embed both mechanisms in a sovereign default model with decentralized capital investment, long-term public debt, and stochastic trend growth, calibrated to salient features of the Spanish economy. We find that the impatience channel dominates quantitatively, to such an extent that laissez-faire is preferable to the government’s ideal fiscal policy, based on households’ welfare.

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Macroeconomics, European Economy, Open Economy Macroeconomics, Capital (Economics), Sovereign Debt

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