This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be either democratically elected or dictators. When leaders can be replaced as in democracies, the incentives for repayment are mainly the ego rents from office and the possibility of getting a corrupt leader from replacement. In a dictatorship, on the other hand, the cost of not repaying loans is the permanent loss of reputation and the loss of future access to credit. There is a trade off between repayment and risk sharing. We show, counter-intuitively, that when ego rents are low, and value of reputation to dictators is high, then democracies repay more often and have lower risk premia than dictatorships
We study how excessive debt-GDP ratios affect political sustainability of prudent fiscal policy in c...
What do self-interested governments’ needs to maintain loyal groups of supporters imply for sovereig...
peer reviewedWe expose the way the market evaluates internal political risk and instability in demo...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
We re-examine the concept of 'democratic advantage' in sovereign debt ratings when optimal repayment...
Sovereign defaults are a relatively common feature of (international) financial markets. They highl...
S overeign debt issuance and repayment decisions are determined by pub-lic officials and may thus be...
I explore the political dimension of developing countries' foreign debt problems, one of the key iss...
What determines the sustainability of sovereign debt? In this paper, we develop a model where myopic...
Sovereign default is often associated with the downfall of incumbent governments in democratic polit...
Why would a sovereign government, immune from bankruptcy procedures and with few assets that could b...
Do differences in the inequality of income affect the likelihood that democratic governments decide ...
Conventional wisdom holds that all nations must repay debt. Regardless of the legitimacy of the regi...
Presidential democracies were 4.9 times more likely to default on external debts between 1976 and 20...
We study how excessive debt-GDP ratios affect political sustainability of prudent fiscal policy in c...
What do self-interested governments’ needs to maintain loyal groups of supporters imply for sovereig...
peer reviewedWe expose the way the market evaluates internal political risk and instability in demo...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
We re-examine the concept of 'democratic advantage' in sovereign debt ratings when optimal repayment...
Sovereign defaults are a relatively common feature of (international) financial markets. They highl...
S overeign debt issuance and repayment decisions are determined by pub-lic officials and may thus be...
I explore the political dimension of developing countries' foreign debt problems, one of the key iss...
What determines the sustainability of sovereign debt? In this paper, we develop a model where myopic...
Sovereign default is often associated with the downfall of incumbent governments in democratic polit...
Why would a sovereign government, immune from bankruptcy procedures and with few assets that could b...
Do differences in the inequality of income affect the likelihood that democratic governments decide ...
Conventional wisdom holds that all nations must repay debt. Regardless of the legitimacy of the regi...
Presidential democracies were 4.9 times more likely to default on external debts between 1976 and 20...
We study how excessive debt-GDP ratios affect political sustainability of prudent fiscal policy in c...
What do self-interested governments’ needs to maintain loyal groups of supporters imply for sovereig...
peer reviewedWe expose the way the market evaluates internal political risk and instability in demo...