Never have so many countries owed so much money to so many banks, with so little prospect of repayment. For more than two years the international financial system has staggered under the burden of a so-called debt crisis, in which a group of non-oil developing countries (NODC\u27s) and their lenders have struggled to prevent default on a level of external debt that is by almost any measure excessive. The most dramatic debt figures are those for the major Latin American borrowers. By the beginning of 1985, Brazil\u27s estimated external debt was almost $100 billion, Mexico\u27s in excess of $96 billion, and Argentina\u27s at least $45 billion. The nine largest U.S. banks have over 110% of their capital exposed in loans to these three debto...