---
name: conducting-country-risk-analysis
language: en
description: Structures sovereign and country risk assessment with economic, political, and financial system evaluation. Use when assessing country risk, evaluating sovereign creditworthiness, or analyzing political risk.
tags:
  - process
  - economic-analysis
  - risk
  - credit
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Economic Research
    - Macroeconomics
    - Policy Analysis
  document_types:
    - Process Documentation
  skill_modes:
    - Process Management
---
# Conducting Country Risk Analysis

Structures sovereign and country risk assessment across economic, political, and financial system dimensions for investment allocation, credit exposure decisions, and portfolio risk management.

## When To Use

- Evaluating a new country for direct investment, lending, or portfolio allocation
- Reassessing existing sovereign exposure after a political transition, fiscal shock, or currency crisis
- Building or updating internal country risk ratings for limit-setting frameworks
- Preparing country briefings for investment committees or credit committees
- Benchmarking sovereign creditworthiness against rating agency assessments (Moody's, S&P, Fitch)

## Inputs To Gather

- **Macroeconomic data**: GDP growth (real, nominal), inflation (CPI, core), unemployment rate, current account balance, fiscal balance, public debt-to-GDP [VERIFY: use IMF WEO, World Bank, or central bank primary sources]
- **External accounts**: Foreign exchange reserves, import cover ratio, external debt composition (short-term vs. long-term, FX-denominated share), net international investment position
- **Fiscal profile**: Revenue composition (tax vs. commodity-dependent), expenditure rigidity, primary balance trend, debt service-to-revenue ratio, contingent liabilities (SOEs, banking sector guarantees)
- **Monetary and exchange rate framework**: Central bank independence, inflation targeting regime, exchange rate regime (peg, managed float, free float), dollarization level [VERIFY: current regime classification per IMF AREAER]
- **Political and institutional indicators**: Governance scores (World Bank WGI, Transparency International CPI), political stability index, rule of law metrics, regulatory quality, history of expropriation or capital controls
- **Financial system health**: Banking sector NPL ratios, capital adequacy, credit growth, sovereign-bank nexus exposure, deposit base stability
- **Market-based signals**: Sovereign CDS spreads, EMBI+ spread, local currency bond yields, FX volatility, capital flow trends

## Workflow

1. **Define scope and purpose** — Identify the decision context (new market entry, credit limit review, portfolio rebalancing). Specify the time horizon (tactical 6-12 month view vs. structural 3-5 year outlook). Select the peer comparison set (regional peers, same-rating-bucket sovereigns).

2. **Assess macroeconomic fundamentals**
   - Compute debt sustainability metrics: debt-to-GDP trajectory under baseline and stress scenarios (interest rate shock +200bps, growth shock -2%, FX depreciation 20%)
   - Evaluate fiscal space: primary balance required to stabilize debt vs. actual primary balance
   - Assess external vulnerability: Guidotti-Greenspan ratio (reserves / short-term external debt), current account financing gap, terms-of-trade sensitivity

3. **Evaluate political and institutional risk**
   - Map the political calendar (elections, referenda, constitutional changes) and assess transition risk
   - Score institutional quality: contract enforcement, judicial independence, property rights protection
   - Identify policy risk triggers: populist fiscal expansion, price controls, capital account restrictions, sanctions exposure
   - Assess geopolitical positioning: trade dependency concentration, alliance structures, sanctions/secondary sanctions risk

4. **Analyze financial system resilience**
   - Evaluate sovereign-bank feedback loop: bank holdings of government debt as % of assets, government implicit guarantees to banking sector
   - Stress-test banking sector: NPL coverage ratios, provisioning adequacy, FX lending exposure vs. borrower FX revenues
   - Assess capital market depth: local bond market size, foreign participation rate, liquidity conditions

5. **Construct composite risk score**
   - Weight risk pillars according to decision context (e.g., for trade credit: heavier weight on transfer/convertibility risk; for equity investment: heavier on political stability and governance)
   - Typical weighting framework: Economic fundamentals 30%, Fiscal strength 20%, External vulnerability 20%, Political/institutional 20%, Financial system 10% [VERIFY: align with firm's internal methodology]
   - Assign pillar scores on a consistent scale (e.g., 1-10 or AAA-D equivalent) and compute weighted composite
   - Compare composite against external benchmarks (rating agencies, OECD country risk classifications, Euler Hermes ratings)

6. **Develop scenario analysis**
   - Define base case, upside, and downside scenarios with explicit trigger conditions
   - Quantify impact on key metrics under each scenario (debt path, reserve adequacy, FX pressure)
   - Identify early warning indicators to monitor for scenario migration (e.g., reserves declining below 3 months import cover, CDS spread exceeding 500bps)

## Output

- **Country risk summary** (1-2 pages): Composite score, pillar scores, rating comparison, key vulnerabilities, and investment/credit implications
- **Pillar scorecards**: Detailed assessment per dimension with supporting data points and trend indicators
- **Scenario matrix**: Base/upside/downside with probabilities, trigger conditions, and metric impacts
- **Monitoring dashboard**: Key indicators with threshold alerts and review frequency recommendations
- **Peer comparison table**: Country ranked against selected peers across all pillars

## Quality Checks

- All macroeconomic data sourced from primary or recognized institutional sources (IMF, World Bank, BIS, central banks) — no unattributed figures
- Debt sustainability projections include explicit assumptions for growth, interest rate, and exchange rate paths
- Political risk assessment references specific events, actors, and timelines rather than vague characterizations
- Composite scoring methodology is transparent and reproducible — another analyst applying the same weights should reach the same score
- Scenarios include quantified trigger thresholds, not just narrative descriptions
- [VERIFY] All statute-dependent items: sanctions lists (OFAC, EU, UN), capital control regimes, bilateral investment treaty coverage, OECD country risk classification category
- Report explicitly states data vintage (as-of dates) and flags any stale inputs exceeding 6 months
