We analyze the 2001 Argentine default on its foreign debt and its consequences in terms of the existing literature on sovereign debt default. It is our purpose to evaluate this experience and to see to what extent the Argentine case requires a re-thinking on the nature and consequences of defaults. We show that the Argentine case contradicts many of their standard predictions, in particular its posterior lack of access to international credit, restriction to international trade and negative economic growth. Moreover, it corroborates the historical fact that many defaulters “get away with it.
There seems to be no end to the sovereign debt woes of Argentina in the near future, as the ‘holdout...
We estimate the causal effect of sovereign default on the equity returns of Argentine firms. We iden...
This paper applies the model presented by J. Merrick Jr. (2001) to estimate both the default recover...
We analyze the 2001 Argentine default on its foreign debt and its consequences in terms of the exist...
We analyze the 2001 Argentine default on its foreign debt and its con-sequences in terms of the exis...
The subject of sovereign debt and default has received intense focus since the beginning of this cen...
We believe that the study of the Argentinean foreign debt needs no justification. For almost three d...
Following the financial crisis effects, the issue of debt sustainability became of global importance...
This report looks at Argentina’s current debt, fiscal, and overall economic situation to see if ther...
In July 2014, Argentina entered selective default, even as the country remained financially solvent....
The Second Circuit’s ruling in NML Capital, Ltd. v. Republic of Argentina, a case in which wealthy c...
Argentina's recent default is simply another chapter in a saga that stretches back over the past cen...
Argentina recently completed the largest sovereign bond restructuring in history. As soon as the gov...
Recent sovereign defaults in emerging countries are accompanied by interest rate spikes and deep rec...
The Republic of Argentina’s sovereign debt default in 2001 represented the largest default of its ki...
There seems to be no end to the sovereign debt woes of Argentina in the near future, as the ‘holdout...
We estimate the causal effect of sovereign default on the equity returns of Argentine firms. We iden...
This paper applies the model presented by J. Merrick Jr. (2001) to estimate both the default recover...
We analyze the 2001 Argentine default on its foreign debt and its consequences in terms of the exist...
We analyze the 2001 Argentine default on its foreign debt and its con-sequences in terms of the exis...
The subject of sovereign debt and default has received intense focus since the beginning of this cen...
We believe that the study of the Argentinean foreign debt needs no justification. For almost three d...
Following the financial crisis effects, the issue of debt sustainability became of global importance...
This report looks at Argentina’s current debt, fiscal, and overall economic situation to see if ther...
In July 2014, Argentina entered selective default, even as the country remained financially solvent....
The Second Circuit’s ruling in NML Capital, Ltd. v. Republic of Argentina, a case in which wealthy c...
Argentina's recent default is simply another chapter in a saga that stretches back over the past cen...
Argentina recently completed the largest sovereign bond restructuring in history. As soon as the gov...
Recent sovereign defaults in emerging countries are accompanied by interest rate spikes and deep rec...
The Republic of Argentina’s sovereign debt default in 2001 represented the largest default of its ki...
There seems to be no end to the sovereign debt woes of Argentina in the near future, as the ‘holdout...
We estimate the causal effect of sovereign default on the equity returns of Argentine firms. We iden...
This paper applies the model presented by J. Merrick Jr. (2001) to estimate both the default recover...