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ID189695
Title ProperUnfolding Sovereign Debt Crisis
LanguageENG
AuthorMosley, Layna ;  Layna Mosley, B. Peter Rosendorff ;  Rosendorff, B. Peter
Summary / Abstract (Note)Following the 2008 global financial crisis, years of low interest rates provided a rare opportunity for many developing nations to borrow in international markets—whether issuing bonds in their own currencies, securing loans from private-sector banks and commodity traders, or borrowing from China, which emerged as a dominant official creditor. Developing countries’ overall external debt rose to a record level during this period. As central banks raise interest rates sharply to counter a global rise in inflation, many of these countries are at risk of default. The mix of public and private creditors and the opacity of many loan terms make it difficult to coordinate restructuring. The key factor may be domestic politics.
`In' analytical NoteCurrent History Vol. 122, No.840; Jan 2023: p.9–14
Journal SourceCurrent History Vol: 122 No 840
Key WordsFinance ;  Sovereign Debt ;  Emerging Markets ;  Economic Policy ;  Government Bonds ;  Default


 
 
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