Bulow and Rogoff (Am Econ Rev 79(1):43–50, 1989) show that lending to small countries cannot be supported merely on the country’s “reputation for repayment” if exclusion from future credit markets is the only consequence of default. Their arguments are valid under fairly general conditions, but they do not go through when the output of the sovereign may vanish along a path of successive low productivity shocks, or when it may grow unboundedly along a path of successive high productivity shocks. We propose an alternative proof illustrating that their renowned sovereign debt paradox holds in full generality.nonnonrechercheInternationa
This paper develops a model of sovereign debt where governments are myopic. Instead of focusing on t...
International audienceWe develop a theory of sovereign borrowing where default penalties are not imp...
We quantify gains from introducing limited financing through non-defaultable debt into a model of eq...
International audienceBulow and Rogoff (Am Econ Rev 79(1):43–50, 1989) show that lending to small co...
Why do countries repay their debts? If countries in default have sufficient opportu-nities to save, ...
Sovereign debt is not sustainable even in the presence of uninsurable risks; which extends the resul...
How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determ...
We propose a novel theory to explain why sovereigns borrow on both domestic and international market...
Why would a sovereign government, immune from bankruptcy procedures and with few assets that could b...
Bulow and Rogoff (1989) show that a country that has access to a sufficiently rich asset market cann...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
What determines the sustainability of sovereign debt? We develop a model where myopic governments se...
One reason why countries service their external debts is the fear that default might lead to shrinka...
This paper analyses a small open economy that wants to borrow from abroad, cannot commit to repay de...
This paper develops a model of sovereign debt where governments are myopic. Instead of focusing on t...
International audienceWe develop a theory of sovereign borrowing where default penalties are not imp...
We quantify gains from introducing limited financing through non-defaultable debt into a model of eq...
International audienceBulow and Rogoff (Am Econ Rev 79(1):43–50, 1989) show that lending to small co...
Why do countries repay their debts? If countries in default have sufficient opportu-nities to save, ...
Sovereign debt is not sustainable even in the presence of uninsurable risks; which extends the resul...
How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determ...
We propose a novel theory to explain why sovereigns borrow on both domestic and international market...
Why would a sovereign government, immune from bankruptcy procedures and with few assets that could b...
Bulow and Rogoff (1989) show that a country that has access to a sufficiently rich asset market cann...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
What determines the sustainability of sovereign debt? We develop a model where myopic governments se...
One reason why countries service their external debts is the fear that default might lead to shrinka...
This paper analyses a small open economy that wants to borrow from abroad, cannot commit to repay de...
This paper develops a model of sovereign debt where governments are myopic. Instead of focusing on t...
International audienceWe develop a theory of sovereign borrowing where default penalties are not imp...
We quantify gains from introducing limited financing through non-defaultable debt into a model of eq...