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QJE2026

Monetary Policy and Sovereign Risk in Emerging Economies (NK-Default)

Cristina Arellano, Yan Bai, Gabriel Mihalache

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-02-23
Primary source
QJE
TL;DR

This article develops a New Keynesian model with sovereign default risk.

QJEPublic FinanceStructural
Metadata matches
Sources
QJE
Fields
Public Finance
Methods and data
Structural
Abstract

This article develops a New Keynesian model with sovereign default risk. Inflation is set by forward-looking firms, monetary policy is an interest rate rule, and the fiscal government borrows externally, long-term, with an option to default. In this framework, default risk creates inflation pressures through an expectations channel, and tight monetary policy disincentivizes fiscal overborrowing. The model sheds light on temporary inflation events in emerging-market data: short-lived spikes in inflation, spreads, and domestic policy rates. As spreads rise, firms increase their prices in expectation of higher future inflation and low consumption during default. Monetary policy tightens, which reduces inflation and helps bring spreads down by disciplining government borrowing. These monetary-fiscal interactions imply that delivering the flexible-prices allocation may not be optimal for monetary policy.

Source versions
QJE2026-02-23
The Quarterly Journal of Economics 141(2):1635-1703
10.1093/qje/qjag012
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