Most discussions of the Greek debt overhang have focussed on the implications for Greece. We show that when additional funds released to the debtor (Greece), via debt restructuring, are used efficiently in pursuit of a practicable business plan, then both debtor and creditor can benefit. We examine a dynamic two country model calibrated to Greek and German economies and support two-steady states, one with endogenous default and one without, depending on creditors expectations. In the default steady state, debt forgiveness lowers the volatility of both German and Greek consumption whereas demanding higher recovery rates has the opposite effect
To measure the debt crisis in Europe in general, and in Greece in particular, there are different le...
This paper provides an analysis and assessment of the Greek sovereign debt crisis, and examines alte...
The present paper studies the evolution of the Greek public debt ratio under different assumptions r...
Most discussions of the Greek debt overhang have focussed on the implications for Greece. We show th...
Most discussions of the Greek debt overhang have focussed on the implications for Greece. We show th...
In this paper it is argued that, in an economy with heavy loans such as Greece, structural reforms a...
There are two possible responses to the Greek debt crisis: ‘Plan A’, continued official lending, for...
The recent trip of the Greek Prime Minister to the US was dominated by repeated calls for debt relie...
Talks are continuing between Greece and its creditors in advance of a scheduled Greek debt repayment...
Perhaps Greece -- a country with a debt to GDP already approaching 150 percent and set to move even ...
Greece has reached a point where, under any plausible macroeconomic scenario, public debt will conti...
Without corrective measures, Greek public debt will exceed 190 percent of GDP, instead of peaking at...
For some months now, discussions over how Greece will restructure its debt have been constrained by ...
The Greek debt restructuring of 2012 stands out in the history of sovereign defaults. It achieved ve...
In contrast to his contribution just a month ago, which examined how a Greek parallel currency to th...
To measure the debt crisis in Europe in general, and in Greece in particular, there are different le...
This paper provides an analysis and assessment of the Greek sovereign debt crisis, and examines alte...
The present paper studies the evolution of the Greek public debt ratio under different assumptions r...
Most discussions of the Greek debt overhang have focussed on the implications for Greece. We show th...
Most discussions of the Greek debt overhang have focussed on the implications for Greece. We show th...
In this paper it is argued that, in an economy with heavy loans such as Greece, structural reforms a...
There are two possible responses to the Greek debt crisis: ‘Plan A’, continued official lending, for...
The recent trip of the Greek Prime Minister to the US was dominated by repeated calls for debt relie...
Talks are continuing between Greece and its creditors in advance of a scheduled Greek debt repayment...
Perhaps Greece -- a country with a debt to GDP already approaching 150 percent and set to move even ...
Greece has reached a point where, under any plausible macroeconomic scenario, public debt will conti...
Without corrective measures, Greek public debt will exceed 190 percent of GDP, instead of peaking at...
For some months now, discussions over how Greece will restructure its debt have been constrained by ...
The Greek debt restructuring of 2012 stands out in the history of sovereign defaults. It achieved ve...
In contrast to his contribution just a month ago, which examined how a Greek parallel currency to th...
To measure the debt crisis in Europe in general, and in Greece in particular, there are different le...
This paper provides an analysis and assessment of the Greek sovereign debt crisis, and examines alte...
The present paper studies the evolution of the Greek public debt ratio under different assumptions r...