How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determine interest rates and sovereign debt sustainability? In this paper, we address this question in the context of a stochastic general equilibrium model with lack of commitment and self-enforcing debt in which default has two consequences: loss of access to international borrowing and output costs. In contrast to Bulow and Rogoff (1989), we show that part of the ability to borrow is merely attributed to the threat of credit exclusion, or equivalently, to the loss of the sovereign's reputation. Apart from the limit case–analyzed by Hellwig and Lorenzoni (2009)–where output costs are absent, equilibrium interest rates are always higher than growt...
We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for rep...
We study the link between sovereign default, domestic credit markets and financial institutions, bot...
This paper empirically evaluates four types of costs that may result from an international sovereign...
How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determ...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
Why would a sovereign government, immune from bankruptcy procedures and with few assets that could b...
This paper presents a continuous-time model of sovereign debt. In it, a relatively impatient soverei...
International audienceWe develop a theory of sovereign borrowing where default penalties are not imp...
This paper analyses a small open economy that wants to borrow from abroad, cannot commit to repay de...
International audienceBulow and Rogoff (Am Econ Rev 79(1):43–50, 1989) show that lending to small co...
We propose a novel theory to explain why sovereigns borrow on both domestic and international market...
International audienceWe provide a novel characterization of self-enforcing debt limits in a general...
Why do countries repay their debts? If countries in default have sufficient opportu-nities to save, ...
We characterize equilibria with endogenous debt constraints for a general equilibrium econ-omy with ...
We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for rep...
We study the link between sovereign default, domestic credit markets and financial institutions, bot...
This paper empirically evaluates four types of costs that may result from an international sovereign...
How domestic costs of default do interact with the threat of exclusion from credit markets to determ...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
International audienceThe paper aims at improving our understanding of self-enforcing debt in compet...
Why would a sovereign government, immune from bankruptcy procedures and with few assets that could b...
This paper presents a continuous-time model of sovereign debt. In it, a relatively impatient soverei...
International audienceWe develop a theory of sovereign borrowing where default penalties are not imp...
This paper analyses a small open economy that wants to borrow from abroad, cannot commit to repay de...
International audienceBulow and Rogoff (Am Econ Rev 79(1):43–50, 1989) show that lending to small co...
We propose a novel theory to explain why sovereigns borrow on both domestic and international market...
International audienceWe provide a novel characterization of self-enforcing debt limits in a general...
Why do countries repay their debts? If countries in default have sufficient opportu-nities to save, ...
We characterize equilibria with endogenous debt constraints for a general equilibrium econ-omy with ...
We show that debt is sustainable at a competitive equilibrium based solely on the reputation for rep...
We study the link between sovereign default, domestic credit markets and financial institutions, bot...
This paper empirically evaluates four types of costs that may result from an international sovereign...