@techreport{9b12671b9182416d95640c9d0cd6535b,
title = "The Puzzle of Persistently Negative Interest Rate-Growth Differentials: Financial Repression or Income Catch-Up?",
abstract = "The interest rate-growth differential (IRGD) shows a marked correlation with GDP per capita. It has been on average around 1 percentage point for large advanced economies during 1999-2008; but below -7 percentage points among non-advanced economies - exerting a powerful stabilizing influence on government debt ratios. We show that large negative IRGDs are largely due to real interest rates well below market equilibrium - possibly stemming from financial repression and captive and distorted markets, whereas the income catch-up process plays a relatively modest role. We find econometric support for this conjecture. Therefore, the IRGD in non-advanced economies is likely to rise with financial integration and market development, well before their GDP per capita converges to advanced-economy levels.",
author = "Jaejoon Woo and Anna Shabunina and Julio Escolano",
year = "2011",
month = nov,
day = "19",
language = "American English",
series = "IMF Working Papers, Vol. , pp. 1-29, 2011",
type = "WorkingPaper",
}