“We suffer pressures, a lack of understanding, unclear answers and delays from the international organizations, which seem not to understand the need for growth in order to resolve the debt problem in an efficient way. In our latest Agreement with the IMF, we agreed on conditions with which we are doing our utmost to comply, yet we are constantly faced with new requests and demands that seem not to want to take note of our country’s extreme situation. ” Argentine President Nestor Kircher at the close of th
In July 2014, Argentina entered selective default, even as the country remained financially solvent....
Argentina’s case is symptomatic of a confidence crisis as explained by multiple equilibria models of...
The processes that led to the default and restructuring of the Argentinean debt constitute the main ...
There seems to be no end to the sovereign debt woes of Argentina in the near future, as the ‘holdout...
Following the financial crisis effects, the issue of debt sustainability became of global importance...
In January 2002, the Argentine government announced it would default on $141 billion in public secto...
Argentina's recent default is simply another chapter in a saga that stretches back over the past cen...
Political support for Argentina\u27s currency board rested on distributing the early gains from endi...
In December 2001, following an extended period of economic and political instability, Argentina suff...
Argentina recently completed the largest sovereign bond restructuring in history. As soon as the gov...
The Republic of Argentina’s sovereign debt default in 2001 represented the largest default of its ki...
After returning to financial markets in 2016, Argentina asked for IMF financing in 2018 and defaulte...
This study investigates, with preliminary insights, the process of Argentina's financial valorizatio...
Nobel laureate in economics, Simon Kuznets, allegedly commented “There are four kinds of countries i...
Sovereign debt crises are a critical aspect of developing countries. In the past, debt restructuring...
In July 2014, Argentina entered selective default, even as the country remained financially solvent....
Argentina’s case is symptomatic of a confidence crisis as explained by multiple equilibria models of...
The processes that led to the default and restructuring of the Argentinean debt constitute the main ...
There seems to be no end to the sovereign debt woes of Argentina in the near future, as the ‘holdout...
Following the financial crisis effects, the issue of debt sustainability became of global importance...
In January 2002, the Argentine government announced it would default on $141 billion in public secto...
Argentina's recent default is simply another chapter in a saga that stretches back over the past cen...
Political support for Argentina\u27s currency board rested on distributing the early gains from endi...
In December 2001, following an extended period of economic and political instability, Argentina suff...
Argentina recently completed the largest sovereign bond restructuring in history. As soon as the gov...
The Republic of Argentina’s sovereign debt default in 2001 represented the largest default of its ki...
After returning to financial markets in 2016, Argentina asked for IMF financing in 2018 and defaulte...
This study investigates, with preliminary insights, the process of Argentina's financial valorizatio...
Nobel laureate in economics, Simon Kuznets, allegedly commented “There are four kinds of countries i...
Sovereign debt crises are a critical aspect of developing countries. In the past, debt restructuring...
In July 2014, Argentina entered selective default, even as the country remained financially solvent....
Argentina’s case is symptomatic of a confidence crisis as explained by multiple equilibria models of...
The processes that led to the default and restructuring of the Argentinean debt constitute the main ...