The international financial system has changed dramatically over the past ten years. Less developed countries (LDCs) have experienced increasing balance of payments deficits and continue to borrow quite heavily from commercial banks to finance those deficits. The LDCs and the commercial banks now are locked into a debtor-creditor relationship of unprecedented magnitude. Although until recently this relationship played an important role as a buffer to world economic crises and cycles and as a source of development capital, it now has great potential for catastrophe
This paper presents a theoretical model to describe the effects of default risk on international len...
Lending and borrowing, and regulations to control them, go back 4,000 years and international lendin...
Much concern on the international scene has been on debt to less developed countries (LDCs). News ab...
The relationship that now exists between commercial banks and less developed countries (LDCs) threat...
Unprecedented lending by commercial banks to less developed countries (LDCs) over the past decade ha...
An examination of the evolutionary stages of the debt problem in developing countries, with a discus...
The major theme of this paper is that the commercial banks have weathered the debt crisis, while man...
Banks and banking, International ; Bank loans ; Developing countries ; Debts, External ; Risk
Conventional wisdom holds that LDC debt problems reflect, in part, the switch of foreign financing t...
This article is a brief review of the financial position of developing countries in the internationa...
WP 2003-27 August 2003We analyze the transmission of shocks through international bank lending, as i...
Summary.-Conventional wisdom holds that LDC debt problems reflect, in part, the switch of foreign fi...
The main emphasis of this paper is on the debt repayment difficulties experienced by the Less Develo...
In August 1982, Mexico announced that it was unable to meet its debt obligations then falling due. S...
A consideration of International Lending: The Case of Developing Nations is timely not only because ...
This paper presents a theoretical model to describe the effects of default risk on international len...
Lending and borrowing, and regulations to control them, go back 4,000 years and international lendin...
Much concern on the international scene has been on debt to less developed countries (LDCs). News ab...
The relationship that now exists between commercial banks and less developed countries (LDCs) threat...
Unprecedented lending by commercial banks to less developed countries (LDCs) over the past decade ha...
An examination of the evolutionary stages of the debt problem in developing countries, with a discus...
The major theme of this paper is that the commercial banks have weathered the debt crisis, while man...
Banks and banking, International ; Bank loans ; Developing countries ; Debts, External ; Risk
Conventional wisdom holds that LDC debt problems reflect, in part, the switch of foreign financing t...
This article is a brief review of the financial position of developing countries in the internationa...
WP 2003-27 August 2003We analyze the transmission of shocks through international bank lending, as i...
Summary.-Conventional wisdom holds that LDC debt problems reflect, in part, the switch of foreign fi...
The main emphasis of this paper is on the debt repayment difficulties experienced by the Less Develo...
In August 1982, Mexico announced that it was unable to meet its debt obligations then falling due. S...
A consideration of International Lending: The Case of Developing Nations is timely not only because ...
This paper presents a theoretical model to describe the effects of default risk on international len...
Lending and borrowing, and regulations to control them, go back 4,000 years and international lendin...
Much concern on the international scene has been on debt to less developed countries (LDCs). News ab...