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RETHINKING SOVEREIGN DEBT 

Odette Lienau - Personal Name;

Sovereign debt markets have demonstrated incredible resil- ience despite a century of dramatic political and economic up- heaval. Among the most remarkable aspects of the contemporary debt
regime is the degree to which expectations of borrowers remain rela- tively uniform even in the face of such major shifts. These basic expecta- tions resolve into one background rule: sovereign borrowers must repay, regardless of the circumstances of the initial debt contract, the actual use of loan proceeds, or the exigencies of any potential default. This is not to say that countries always pay; certainly, they do not. But the background rule remains, and it sets the standard by which creditors and others form their reputational judgments and against which sovereign borrowers are evaluated and chastised.
This repayment norm helps to immunize the debt regime from serious challenge and to stabilize the massive sums at stake. In particular, it buttresses our avoidance of prickly questions about fairness and appro- priateness in the international economic arena. Several troubling queries in recent decades include: Should a black-African-led South Africa really be expected to repay apartheid era debt? Or, given that Saddam Hussein was a dictator who used funds for the oppression of a majority of Iraq’s population, would it be appropriate to require future Iraqi generations to pay for his iniquity? More generally, who counts as the “sovereign” in these debt situations—is sovereignty just the legal shell for whoever happens to control a territory, or does it imply underlying principles of legitimate representation or public benefit? And how might all this fit into assessments of a country’s creditworthiness?
Notwithstanding such questions, the repayment norm exerts a par- ticular kind of power in international economic relations by shaping expectations of appropriate action in the area of sovereign debt


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Detail Information
Series Title
RETHINKING SOVEREIGN DEBT 
Call Number
-
Publisher
USA : Harvard University Press., 2014
Collation
1-342
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
978-0-674-72506-5
Classification
NONE
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
1st Edtion
Subject(s)
Business
Specific Detail Info
-
Statement of Responsibility
-
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No other version available

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Accra Metropolitan University
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Accra Metropolitan University is a forward-thinking, private higher education institution in Ghana dedicated to empowering minds and shaping futures for sustainable global development. Fully accredited by the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC), the university is built on the core pillars of LIFE: Leadership, Innovation, Flexibility, and Entrepreneurship.

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