We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for repayment; that is, even without collateral or legal sanctions available to creditors. In an incomplete asset market, when the rate of interest falls recurrently below the rate of growth of the economy, self-insurance is more costly than borrowing, and repayments on loans are enforced by the implicit threat of loss of the risk-sharing advantages of debt contracts. Private debt credibly circulates as a form of inside money, and it is not valued as a speculative bubble. Competitive equilibria with self-enforcing debt exist under a suitable hypothesis of gains from trade
We study Markov‐perfect optimal fiscal policy in an economy with financial frictions and sovereign d...
We characterize equilibria with endogenous debt constraints for a general equilibrium economy with l...
How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determ...
We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for rep...
We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for rep...
Debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium due solely to the reputation of debtors for repayme...
The paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in competitive dynamic economie...
Sovereign debt is not sustainable even in the presence of uninsurable risks; which extends the resul...
We show that sovereign debt is unsustainable if debt contracts are not supported by direct sanctions...
This paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in competitive dynamic economi...
We characterize equilibria with endogenous debt constraints for a general equilibrium econ-omy with ...
The paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in competitive dynamic economie...
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...
We study the sustainability of public debt in a closed production economy where a benevolent governm...
We study Markov‐perfect optimal fiscal policy in an economy with financial frictions and sovereign d...
We characterize equilibria with endogenous debt constraints for a general equilibrium economy with l...
How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determ...
We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for rep...
We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for rep...
Debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium due solely to the reputation of debtors for repayme...
The paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in competitive dynamic economie...
Sovereign debt is not sustainable even in the presence of uninsurable risks; which extends the resul...
We show that sovereign debt is unsustainable if debt contracts are not supported by direct sanctions...
This paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in competitive dynamic economi...
We characterize equilibria with endogenous debt constraints for a general equilibrium econ-omy with ...
The paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in competitive dynamic economie...
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...
We study the sustainability of public debt in a closed production economy where a benevolent governm...
We study Markov‐perfect optimal fiscal policy in an economy with financial frictions and sovereign d...
We characterize equilibria with endogenous debt constraints for a general equilibrium economy with l...
How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determ...