Financial crises frequently increase public sector borrowing and threaten some form of sovereign debt crisis. Until recently, high income countries were thought to have become less vulnerable to severe banking crises that have lasting negative effects on growth. Since 2007, crises and attempted reforms in the United States and Europe indicate that advanced countries remain acutely vulnerable. Best practice from developing country experience suggests that regulatory constraints on the financial sector should be strengthened, but this is hard to do in countries where finance has a great deal of political power and cultural prestige, and where leverage is already high
Uncertainty in international financial and currency markets has become common, while the only countr...
Public debt was considered a reason of concern for many states. The problem became acute in the earl...
Yale University professor John Geanakoplos discusses implications of “the leverage cycle”—a phenomen...
Financial crises frequently increase public sector borrowing and threaten some form of sovereign deb...
The traditional view of sovereign debt as a relationship between a developing country government and...
Foreign currency debt is widely believed to increase risks of financial crisis, especially after bei...
In a future sovereign debt crisis, debt restructurings are inevitable simply because there is no alt...
A country's future sovereign debt depends on its domestic macroeconomic performance, its sustainabil...
Lending and borrowing, and regulations to control them, go back 4,000 years and international lendin...
The present crisis is the bottom of a recurring problem that I call the leverage cycle, in which lev...
A key precursor of twentieth-century financial crises in emerging and advanced economies alike was t...
Periods of high indebtedness have historically been associated with a rising incidence of default or...
This paper studies sovereign debt crises during the period 1993-2006 through the prism of the primar...
Is sovereign borrowing so different from corporate debt that there is no need for bankruptcy-style p...
Not only corporate but also sovereign debtors, in particular developing countries, may get into fina...
Uncertainty in international financial and currency markets has become common, while the only countr...
Public debt was considered a reason of concern for many states. The problem became acute in the earl...
Yale University professor John Geanakoplos discusses implications of “the leverage cycle”—a phenomen...
Financial crises frequently increase public sector borrowing and threaten some form of sovereign deb...
The traditional view of sovereign debt as a relationship between a developing country government and...
Foreign currency debt is widely believed to increase risks of financial crisis, especially after bei...
In a future sovereign debt crisis, debt restructurings are inevitable simply because there is no alt...
A country's future sovereign debt depends on its domestic macroeconomic performance, its sustainabil...
Lending and borrowing, and regulations to control them, go back 4,000 years and international lendin...
The present crisis is the bottom of a recurring problem that I call the leverage cycle, in which lev...
A key precursor of twentieth-century financial crises in emerging and advanced economies alike was t...
Periods of high indebtedness have historically been associated with a rising incidence of default or...
This paper studies sovereign debt crises during the period 1993-2006 through the prism of the primar...
Is sovereign borrowing so different from corporate debt that there is no need for bankruptcy-style p...
Not only corporate but also sovereign debtors, in particular developing countries, may get into fina...
Uncertainty in international financial and currency markets has become common, while the only countr...
Public debt was considered a reason of concern for many states. The problem became acute in the earl...
Yale University professor John Geanakoplos discusses implications of “the leverage cycle”—a phenomen...