Pooling risk among countries

Article dans une revue: Suppose that international sharing risk—worldwide or with large numbers of countries—were costly. How much risk-sharing could be gained in small sets (or “pools”) of countries? To answer this question, we compute the means and variances of poolwide gross domestic product growth, for all possible pools of any size drawn from a sample of 74 countries, and compare them with the means and variances of consumption growth in each country individually. From the difference, we infer potential diversification and welfare gains. As much as two-thirds of the first best, full worldwide welfare gains can be obtained in groupings of as few as seven countries. The largest potential gains arise from pools consisting of countries in different regions and including countries with weak institutions. We argue that international risk-sharing fails to emerge because the largest potential gains are among countries that do not trust each other's willingness and ability to abide by international contractual obligations.

Auteur(s)

Michael Callen, Jean Imbs, Paolo Mauro

Revue
  • Journal of International Economics
Date de publication
  • 2015
Mots-clés JEL
E21 E32 F41
Mots-clés
  • Risk sharing
  • Diversification
  • Growth-indexation
  • GDP-indexed instruments
Pages
  • 88-99
Version
  • 1
Volume
  • 96