by John Glover
March 9, 2014 — 1:00 PM EET
Bloomberg
March 9
(Bloomberg) -- The amount of debt globally has soared more than 40 percent to
$100 trillion since the first signs of the financial crisis as governments
borrowed to pull their economies out of recession and companies took advantage
of record low interest rates, according to the Bank for International
Settlements.
The $30
trillion increase from $70 trillion between mid-2007 and mid-2013 compares with
a $3.86 trillion decline in the value of equities to $53.8 trillion in the same
period, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The jump in debt as measured
by the Basel , Switzerland-based BIS in its
quarterly review is almost twice the U.S. ’s gross domestic product.
Borrowing
has soared as central banks suppress benchmark interest rates to spur growth
after the U.S.
subprime mortgage market collapsed and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s
bankruptcy sent the world into its worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression. Yields on all types of bonds, from governments to corporates and
mortgages, average about 2 percent, down from more than 4.8 percent in 2007,
according to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Broad Market Index.
“Given the
significant expansion in government spending in recent years, governments
(including central, state and local governments) have been the largest debt
issuers,” according to Branimir Gruic, an analyst, and Andreas Schrimpf, an
economist at the BIS. The organization is owned by 60 central banks and hosts
the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, a group of regulators and central
bankers that sets global capital standards.
Austerity
Measures
Marketable U.S. government
debt outstanding has surged to a record $12 trillion, up from $4.5 trillion at
the end of 2007, according to U.S. Treasury data compiled by Bloomberg.
Corporate bond sales globally jumped during the period, with issuance totaling
more than $21 trillion, Bloomberg data show.
Concerned
that high debt loads would cause international investors to avoid their
markets, many nations resorted to austerity measures of reduced spending and
increased taxes, reining in their economies in the process as they tried to
restore the fiscal order they abandoned to fight the worldwide recession.
Adjusting
budgets to ignore interest payments, the International Monetary Fund said late
last year that the so-called primary deficit in the Group of Seven countries
reached an average 5.1 percent in 2010 when also smoothed to ignore large
economic swings. The measure will fall to 1.2 percent this year, the IMF
predicted.
The
unprecedented retrenchments between 2010 and 2013 amounted to 3.5 percent of U.S. gross domestic product and 3.3 percent of
euro-area GDP, according to Julian Callow, chief international economist at
Barclays Plc in London .
The
riskiest to the most-creditworthy bonds have returned more than 31 percent
since 2007, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data. Treasury and
agency debt handed investors gains of 27 percent in the period, while corporate
bonds worldwide returned more than 40 percent, the indexes show.
To contact
the reporter on this story: John Glover in London at johnglover@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editors responsible for this story: Shelley Smith at
ssmith118@bloomberg.net Robert Burgess
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