Sovereign debt / AUT
Austria
Latest government debt 81.2% of GDP (2024, General govt (IMF GDD)). 6 sovereign-debt crisis episodes on record, 1802 to 1952.
Official risk classification
Austria has been unclassified throughout the record (1999 to present). High-income OECD and high-income euro-area countries are exempt from the CRC minimum-premium framework: export-credit pricing for these markets follows market terms, so the OECD does not assign them a numeric risk category. This is an exemption by design, not missing data.
The CRC scores the likelihood a country services its external debt on an eight-step scale, from 0 to 7, and sets the minimum premiums the OECD Arrangement participants charge on officially supported export credit. Categories 1 to 7 are the risk ladder (1 lowest, 7 highest). Category 0, and the blank status the OECD has used for these countries since 2013, mark high-income OECD and high-income euro-area economies that are exempt because their credit is priced on market terms. An exempt status is unclassified by design, not a data gap and not a zero-risk rating.
Source: OECD, Country Risk Classifications of the Participants to the Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits OECD CRC, free reuse with attribution. Category is an ordinal 0-7 risk step, not a probability; 0 and blank denote exemption. Methodology
Debt trajectory, 1980 onward
Debt to GDP by perimeter, observed years only (no IMF forecast years). Central-government debt is mechanically below general government (it excludes state, local and social-security debt). Shaded bands are sovereign-debt crisis years.
Source: IMF Global Debt Database (Mbaye, Moreno-Badia & Chae, IMF WP/18/111) | IMF World Economic Outlook Debt is % of GDP; crisis-year shading from the sovereign-debt chronologies. Methodology
Debt profile
- General government (IMF GDD)
- 81.2% (2024)
- Central government (IMF GDD)
- 62.1% (2024)
- General gov gross (IMF WEO, April 2026 edition)
- 79.2% (2024)
- Private non-financial (IMF GDD)
- 133.0% (2024)
- Peak debt
- 85.6% (2015)
- Sovereign crises
- 6
- Last crisis
- 1952
- Vs 2000+ crisis-start median
- +0.5
Quarterly debt (World Bank QPSD)
A higher-frequency companion to the annual IMF figures above: general government gross debt, quarter by quarter, from the World Bank Quarterly Public Sector Debt database.
QPSD and the annual IMF WEO/GDD series are not the same measure: coverage of the public sector and the valuation of instruments (nominal, face or market value) can differ, so a quarterly QPSD reading and an annual IMF reading for the same period need not match. Read the quarterly line as within-year timing, not as a re-statement of the annual ratio.
Source: World Bank Quarterly Public Sector Debt (QPSD) World Bank QPSD, CC BY 4.0. General government gross debt, percent of GDP; 2000Q1 to 2025Q4. Methodology
External debt (World Bank IDS)
No IDS external-debt series for Austria. The World Bank’s International Debt Statistics covers low- and middle-income borrowing economies only, so high-income economies are absent by construction.
Debt in default (BoC-BoE CRAG)
No external debt in default recorded for Austria in the BoC-BoE Sovereign Default Database (1960 onward).
Sovereign-debt crisis history
Each episode with the government debt-to-GDP ratio in its start year, where a reading exists. Episode dates use the same merge as the crisis atlas (consecutive crisis years bridged across gaps of up to two years).
- 1938–1952Pre-1950No debt reading at startepisode →
- 1932–1933Pre-1950Debt at start: 29.5% (General govt (GMD historical))episode →
- 1920–1922Pre-1950No debt reading at startepisode →
- 1914–1915Pre-1950No debt reading at startepisode →
- 1868–1870Pre-1950No debt reading at startepisode →
- 1802–1816Pre-1950No debt reading at startepisode →
Source: Global Macro Database 2026_06 (Müller, Xu, Lehbib & Chen 2025) | Reinhart-Rogoff via HBS BFFS | Laeven & Valencia (2020) Methodology
Restructuring history and creditor losses
Every recorded Austria sovereign-debt restructuring and the creditor loss (“haircut”) it imposed. The preferred haircut is the present-value measure (Sturzenegger–Zettelmeyer methodology); the face-value column is the headline principal write-down. Amounts restructured are in current US dollars. A crisis link appears where the restructuring year falls inside one of the sovereign-debt crisis episodes above.
| Year | Haircut (NPV) | Face value | Debt restructured | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1923 | 83.0% | 58.6% | $9.4M | Meyer, Reinhart and Trebesch (2022) |
| 1952 crisis → | 43.4% | 20.3% | $82.1M | Meyer, Reinhart and Trebesch (2022) |
Source: Cruces & Trebesch (2013), AEJ: Macro; updated in Graf von Luckner, Meyer, Reinhart & Trebesch (2024), IMF Economic Review Kiel Institute / Trebesch sovereign-haircut database, research use with citation. Haircut and face-value figures are percentages; debt restructured is current US dollars. Methodology
Reading this profile
- Debt levels mix perimeters. The headline and debt-at-start figures fall back through IMF general government, then central government, then WEO gross debt, then (before 1980) the GMD historical series. Central-government readings understate the general-government ratio.
- Crisis flags end in 2016 (Reinhart-Rogoff) and 2017 (GMD, Laeven-Valencia), while debt runs to 2024. “Years since last crisis” and the absence of recent crises reflect where the sources stop, not a guarantee of calm.
- Debt level is a weak predictor of default on its own; see the methodology for the debt-intolerance evidence and the full construction.