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The Unfolding Sovereign Debt Crisis

Current History, 2023
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 ...
Layna Mosley, B. Peter Rosendorff
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The Sovereign Debt Crisis

2013
The global credit crisis has forced governments to bail out their financial systems and pursue easy fiscal policy, in some cases with a prodigious stimulus, to alleviate the recession (see Karakitsos, 2012). As a result, governments in many advanced economies have become over-indebted, thereby threatening the global financial system and posing the risk
Philip Arestis, Elias Karakitsos
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Sovereign Debt Crisis: Euro-Reality

2017
In the domestic credit market creditor and debtor rights are clearly defined. In contrast, sovereign debt repayment is largely contingent on the debtor government's willingness to repay as enforcement of contracts at the international level is limited.
Horvath, Julius   +1 more
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Modelling the Sovereign Debt Crisis in Europe

National Institute Economic Review, 2011
This note examines the impact of rising bond yields in certain Euro Area countries on debt sustainability. It concludes that without the financial assistance of the bailout packages, government debt in Greece would clearly have been unsustainable, while Ireland and Portugal would have been extremely vulnerable.
Orazgani, Ali, Holland, D., Kirby, S.
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The Euro Zone and the Sovereign Debt Crisis

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2017
In January 2011, during the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, Jason Sterling, a hedge fund manager, was conducting online research to see if he could trade on any newsworthy information emerging from the summit. Sterling's fund traded primarily in sovereign debt, and he needed to figure out if European leaders would be able ...
George (Yiorgos) Allayannis, Adam Risell
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Sovereign Debt and the Financial Crisis

2010
In the wake of the financial crisis of 2008, governments worldwide undertook massive fiscal interventions to stave off what might otherwise have been a system-wide financial and economic meltdown. These policy responses engendered significant shifts in the growth trajectories and debt sustainability outlooks of both developed and developing economies ...
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The Irish Sovereign Debt Crisis

2015
From August 2010, financial markets’ concerns about the creditworthiness of the Irish sovereign increased significantly, due to large contingent liabilities from bank bail-outs and guarantees, as well as the direct impact on public finances of the real-estate collapse and deep economic recession.
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Eurozone Sovereign Debt Crisis

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2011
The eurozone, composed of 17 countries which have adopted the euro as their currency, has been struggling with an apparently-intractable crisis over the enormous debts faced by its weakest economies and by countries impacted by the bursting of the housing boom in the past global recession of 2007-09.
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