Sovereign Debt and Deficit by Country

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Unobtanium

Big Eyed Bug
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Sovereign Debt and Deficit by Country
http://www.forbes.com/sites/davidmarotta/2012/02/10/sovereign-debt-and-deficit-by-country/

In Freedom Investing 2012 I analyzed the latest Index of Economic Freedom from The Heritage Foundation. Here I present some simple analysis of sovereign debt and deficit by country using data from the Heritage Foundation.

The economic freedom raw data from the Heritage Foundation included the following three statistics for each country:

1.Tax Burden as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
2.Government Expenditure as a percentage of GDP.
3.Public debt as a percentage of GDP.

From these I computed a country’s deficit (4) as a percentage of GDP by taking the Tax Burden (1) minus the Government Expenditure (2). There are subtler ways of evaluating debt and deficit as some countries have rainy-day funds while other just use a rainy day as an excuse toward even more wanton spending.

Then I plotted each country’s debt (3) and deficit (4) on the following chart:



In March 2010 Bill Grosses drew a similar chart in his newsletter in which he circled the “Ring of Fire” countries to be worried about. We warned to avoid these “ring of fire” countries. And a year later revisited that advice confirming that investors should continue to avoid the “ring of fire.” Now almost a second year later we reiterate that sovereign debt and deficit produces a drag on a country’s economic prospects. Low debt and deficit continues to be one of the important components of economic freedom.

Most investors have heard of the BRIC emerging market countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China). What is important in the Ring of Fire are the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain) pulling down the European Union. Add to these countries Japan, The United States, and the United Kingdom.

Sovereign debt and deficit weigh most heavily on a country’s level of government spending, one of the ten components of freedom in the Heritage Foundation economic freedom study. Here is a graph showing the freedom scores for government spending in Europe.

There are probably multiple reasons why high economic freedom is important to the investment returns of companies in a country, but sovereign debt and deficit is certainly one of them.
 
But debt is money! /Keynesian economist

That's a good chart. Looks like a debt bubble. /deadpan
 
...and the long-term indicator should be rather %deficit, than %debt: Don't overlook the fact that 20% deficit will make additional 100% debt in as short as five years, in stalled/floundering GDP growth scenario. Which is at least "quite possible", for troubled countries.

....GO Greece & Ireland!
 
apparently most of the UK Pols dont know the difference between the debt and the defecit and those that do, prefer not to discuss the debt, cos its a scary big number and its much easier to talk about cutting back the deficit ..........

There really is no hope of a solution the way things are currently structured.
 
All of these topics today have all been very scary! I think I will start buying 18 karat jewelry in Peru every time I go there now. Put it on my credit card, but leave it there.

Another good one Unobtanium.
 
Wow! I just read a lot more scary shit over at ZH. Apparently Iran is shadowing our carrier in the Gulf with some remote control drone boats. They are poking the big guy with a stick, and I suspect it won't end well.
 
The numbers for Switzerland's budget in the chart for 2010 are wrong. We've had a small surplus, not a deficit.
 
Well Swissaustrian, Switzerland once again stands apart in the chart shown in the article below.

 
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