COWLES FOUNDATION FOR RESEARCH IN
ECONOMICS
AT YALE UNIVERSITY
Box 208281
New Haven, CT 06520-8281

COWLES FOUNDATION DISCUSSION PAPER NO. 1070
Ponzi Finance, Government Solvency and
the Redundancy or Usefulness of Public Debt
Willem H. Buiter and Kenneth M. Kletzer
April 1994
We study how the government's ability to borrow depends on its capacity to tax. Using a
two-period OLG growth model, we establish the following.
When lump-sum taxes are unrestricted, Ponzi finance is possible, regardless of whether the
economy is dynamically inefficient and regardless of the relationship between the interest
rate and the growth rate. Ponzi finance, and government debt generally, is unessential
or redundant: it does not enlarge the set of allocations that can be supported as
competitive equilibria.
When lump-sum taxes are restricted, Ponzi finance (public debt) may be essential.z
Central to the paper is our characterization of feasible government fiscal-financial plans
for an infinite-lived government facing a sequence of finite-lived
overlapping private generations. The central idea is that the government does not bankrupt
private agents. We contrast our criterion with the conventional government solvency
constraint. The conventional solvency constraint (the present value of future government
debt is non-positive in the infinitely distant future) is neither necessary nor sufficient
for our feasibility criterion. When the government must use distortionary taxes and the
long-run interest rate exceeds the long-run growth rate, our feasibility criterion implies
the conventional solvency constraint. |