This article tests the influential democratic advantage hypothesis – that democratic governments have historically borrowed more cheaply than autocratic governments – in the context of the first financial globalization, from circa 1870 to 1913. We construct indicators of political regime types, then regress government bond spreads of 27 independent capital-importing countries on them. In contrast with the mainstream literature, the results suggest that democracies were associated with higher country risk. Our findings indicate that autocratic regimes had a significant advantage: democracies paid 5.7 percent more on their debt than autocracies, controlling for several financial and political variables. This gap is the equivalent of 35.4 perc...
This paper models the executive's choice of whether to reschedule external debt as the outcome of an...
What drives autocrats to default on their sovereign debt? This paper develops the first theory of so...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
The literature exploiting historical data generally supports the democratic advantage thesis, which ...
Why did some developing country governments accumulate large foreign debt burdens in the late twenti...
peer reviewedWe expose the way the market evaluates internal political risk and instability in demo...
Presidential democracies were 4.9 times more likely than parliamentary democracies to default on ext...
Sovereign defaults are a relatively common feature of (international) financial markets. They highl...
Presidential democracies were 4.9 times more likely to default on external debts between 1976 and 20...
For decades, scholars, investors and policymakers treated sovereign default risk as a defining featu...
This article uses a new panel data set to perform a statistical analysis of political regimes and so...
Democratic Advantage (DA) arguments explicitly and implicitly assume that democracies have more tran...
We re-examine the concept of 'democratic advantage' in sovereign debt ratings when optimal repayment...
This thesis is composed by two articles. In the first paper, co-authored with Roberto Pancrazi, we s...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
This paper models the executive's choice of whether to reschedule external debt as the outcome of an...
What drives autocrats to default on their sovereign debt? This paper develops the first theory of so...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
The literature exploiting historical data generally supports the democratic advantage thesis, which ...
Why did some developing country governments accumulate large foreign debt burdens in the late twenti...
peer reviewedWe expose the way the market evaluates internal political risk and instability in demo...
Presidential democracies were 4.9 times more likely than parliamentary democracies to default on ext...
Sovereign defaults are a relatively common feature of (international) financial markets. They highl...
Presidential democracies were 4.9 times more likely to default on external debts between 1976 and 20...
For decades, scholars, investors and policymakers treated sovereign default risk as a defining featu...
This article uses a new panel data set to perform a statistical analysis of political regimes and so...
Democratic Advantage (DA) arguments explicitly and implicitly assume that democracies have more tran...
We re-examine the concept of 'democratic advantage' in sovereign debt ratings when optimal repayment...
This thesis is composed by two articles. In the first paper, co-authored with Roberto Pancrazi, we s...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...
This paper models the executive's choice of whether to reschedule external debt as the outcome of an...
What drives autocrats to default on their sovereign debt? This paper develops the first theory of so...
This paper compares default incentives in competitive sovereign debt markets when leaders can be eit...