| Data: | Portfolio investment, bonds (PPG + PNG) (NFL, current US$) | ||||||||
| Year: | 1960 - 2013 | ||||||||
| Country: | Philippines | ||||||||
| Source: | World Bank (the information in this section is direct quotation from World Bank development data) | ||||||||
| Series Code: | DT.NFL.BOND.CD | ||||||||
| Topic: | Economic Policy & Debt: External debt: Net flows | ||||||||
| Short Definition: | 0 | ||||||||
| Long Definition: | Bonds are securities issued with a fixed rate of interest for a period of more than one year. They include net flows through cross-border public and publicly guaranteed and private nonguaranteed bond issues. Data are in current U.S. dollars. | ||||||||
| Unit of Measurement: | 0 | ||||||||
| Periodicity: | Annual | ||||||||
| Base Period: | 0 | ||||||||
| Reference Period: | 0 | ||||||||
| Aggregation method: | Sum | ||||||||
| Limitations and exceptions: | The DRS
encourages debtor countries to voluntarily provide information on their
short-term external obligations. By its nature, short-term external debt is
difficult to monitor: loan-by-loan registration is normally impractical, and
monitoring systems typically rely on information requested periodically by
the central bank from the banking sector. The World Bank regards the debtor
country as the authoritative source of information on its short-term debt.
Where such information is not available from the debtor country, data are
derived from BIS data on international bank lending based on time remaining
to original maturity. The data are reported based on residual maturity, but
an estimate of short-term external liabilities by original maturity can be derived
by deducting from claims due in one year those that have a maturity of
between one and two years. However, BIS data include liabilities reported
only by banks within the BIS reporting area. The results should thus be
interpreted with caution. Because short-term debt poses an immediate burden
and is particularly important for monitoring vulnerability, it is compared
with total debt and foreign exchange reserves, which are instrumental in
providing coverage for such obligations. A country's external debt burden, both debt outstanding and debt service, affects its creditworthiness and vulnerability. While data related to public and publicly guaranteed debt are reported to the DRS on a loan-by-loan basis, aggregate data on long-term private nonguaranteed debt are reported annually and are reported by the country or estimated by World Bank staff for countries where this type of external debt is known to be significant. Estimates are based on national data from the World Bank's Quarterly External Debt Statistics. |
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| Notes from original source: | 0 | ||||||||
| General Comments: | 0 | ||||||||
| Original Source: | World Bank, International Debt Statistics. | ||||||||
| Statistical concept and methodology: | Bonds are
debt instruments issued by public and publicly guaranteed or private debtors
with durations of one year or longer. Bonds usually give the holder the
unconditional right to fixed money income or contractually determined,
variable money income. Data on external debt are gathered through the World Bank's Debtor Reporting System (DRS). Long term debt data are compiled using the countries report on public and publicly guaranteed borrowing on a loan-by-loan basis and private non guaranteed borrowing on an aggregate basis. These data are supplemented by information from major multilateral banks and official lending agencies in major creditor countries. Short-term debt data are gathered from the Quarterly External Debt Statistics (QEDS) database, jointly developed by the World Bank and the IMF and from creditors through the reporting systems of the Bank for International Settlements. Debt data are reported in the currency of repayment and compiled and published in U.S. dollars. End-of-period exchange rates are used for the compilation of stock figures (amount of debt outstanding), and projected debt service and annual average exchange rates are used for the flows. Exchange rates are taken from the IMF's International Financial Statistics. Debt repayable in multiple currencies, goods, or services and debt with a provision for maintenance of the value of the currency of repayment are shown at book value. |
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| Development relevance: | External
indebtedness affects a country's creditworthiness and investor perceptions.
Nonreporting countries might have outstanding debt with the World Bank, other
international financial institutions, or private creditors. Total debt
service is contrasted with countries' ability to obtain foreign exchange
through exports of goods, services, primary income, and workers'
remittances. Debt ratios are used to assess the sustainability of a country's debt service obligations, but no absolute rules determine what values are too high. Empirical analysis of developing countries' experience and debt service performance shows that debt service difficulties become increasingly likely when the present value of debt reaches 200 percent of exports. Still, what constitutes a sustainable debt burden varies by country. Countries with fast-growing economies and exports are likely to be able to sustain higher debt levels. |
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