Sovereign debt crises in emerging markets are usually associated with liquidity and banking crises within the economy. This connection is suggested by both anecdotical and empirical evidence. The conventional view is that the domestic financial turmoil is caused by foreign creditors' retaliation. Yet, there is no clear-cut evidence supporting the existence of ``classic" default penalties (e.g., trade sanctions or exclusion from international capital markets). This paper then proposes a novel mechanism linking sovereign defaults with liquidity and banking crises without any intervention of foreign creditors. The model considers a standard unwillingness-to-pay problem assuming that: (i) the enforcement of private contracts is limited and, as ...
This paper analyzes the Eurozone financial crisis through the lens of sovereign bond liquidity. Usin...
Is sovereign debt so different from corporate debt that there is no need for bankruptcy procedures t...
Not only corporate but also sovereign debtors, in particular developing countries, may get into fina...
Sovereign debt crises in emerging markets are usually associated with liquidity and banking crises w...
Sovereign debt crises in emerging markets are usually associated with liquidity and banking crises....
Is sovereign borrowing so different from corporate debt that there is no need for bankruptcy-style p...
Episodes of sovereign default feature three key empirical regularities in connection with the bankin...
We study a model of sovereign debt crisis that combines problems of creditor co-ordination and debto...
Conventional wisdom says that, in the absence of sufficient default penalties, sovereign risk constr...
Episodes of sovereign default feature three key empirical regularities in connection with the bankin...
This paper explores two mechanisms through which a sovereign default can disrupt the domestic econom...
Economic policy makers sometimes perceive a sovereign default as a jump into the unkown. The main pi...
This paper provides a relatively non-technical survey of theoretical research on the e¤ect of sovere...
There has been a growing concern about the vulnerability of emerging countries to fluc-tuations in i...
I argue that the origin of the Eurozone crisis lies neither in unsustainable borrowing nor in arbitr...
This paper analyzes the Eurozone financial crisis through the lens of sovereign bond liquidity. Usin...
Is sovereign debt so different from corporate debt that there is no need for bankruptcy procedures t...
Not only corporate but also sovereign debtors, in particular developing countries, may get into fina...
Sovereign debt crises in emerging markets are usually associated with liquidity and banking crises w...
Sovereign debt crises in emerging markets are usually associated with liquidity and banking crises....
Is sovereign borrowing so different from corporate debt that there is no need for bankruptcy-style p...
Episodes of sovereign default feature three key empirical regularities in connection with the bankin...
We study a model of sovereign debt crisis that combines problems of creditor co-ordination and debto...
Conventional wisdom says that, in the absence of sufficient default penalties, sovereign risk constr...
Episodes of sovereign default feature three key empirical regularities in connection with the bankin...
This paper explores two mechanisms through which a sovereign default can disrupt the domestic econom...
Economic policy makers sometimes perceive a sovereign default as a jump into the unkown. The main pi...
This paper provides a relatively non-technical survey of theoretical research on the e¤ect of sovere...
There has been a growing concern about the vulnerability of emerging countries to fluc-tuations in i...
I argue that the origin of the Eurozone crisis lies neither in unsustainable borrowing nor in arbitr...
This paper analyzes the Eurozone financial crisis through the lens of sovereign bond liquidity. Usin...
Is sovereign debt so different from corporate debt that there is no need for bankruptcy procedures t...
Not only corporate but also sovereign debtors, in particular developing countries, may get into fina...