DG ECFIN: Indebtedness, Deleveraging Dynamics and Macro-economic Adjustment

11 April 2013

The current crisis revealed the unsustainability of private sector indebtedness levels, fuelled in the recent past by a prolonged period of rapid credit expansion in some EU Member States.

The deleveraging process that is now taking place, although necessary, stands as a source of concern in terms of its implications for economic activity. Against this background, this paper aims to

(i) identify the EU Member States that are currently facing deleveraging pressures in the non-financial private sector, making use of the informational content of various indebtedness indicators;

(ii) assess quantitatively those pressures, using both a threshold approach, which compares the current level of households and non-financial corporations' debt with a static benchmark, and a stationarity approach, which goes a step further by taking into account valuation effects and the possibility of a time-varying "sustainable" level of indebtedness;

(iii) refine the link between the identified deleveraging pressures and the actual adjustment of indebtedness through an analysis of the credit supply and demand conditions in each Member State;

(iv) simulate the impact of a households' sector deleveraging shock using a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model and assess the transmission mechanism through which such a shock influences the economic activity.

Some policy implications are also discussed in the concluding section.

Summary for non-specialists

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