1985
DOI: 10.3386/w1673
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Sovereign Debt as a Contingent Claim: Excusable Default, Repudiation, and Reputation

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Cited by 229 publications
(300 citation statements)
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References 6 publications
(4 reference statements)
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“…Maintaining the bimetallic ratio fixed is a variant of the basic convertibility rule, since it is the fixed value of the unit of account that is the essence of the rule. 4 The gold standard rule in the century before World War I can be viewed as a contingent rule, or a rule with escape clauses (Grossman and Van Huyck, 1988;DeKock and Grilli, 1989;Flood and Isard, 1989;Bordo and Kydland, 1995). The monetary authority maintains the standard --keeps the price of the currency in terms of gold fixed --except in the event of a well understood emergency such as a major war.…”
Section: The Gold Standard As a Commitment Mechanismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Maintaining the bimetallic ratio fixed is a variant of the basic convertibility rule, since it is the fixed value of the unit of account that is the essence of the rule. 4 The gold standard rule in the century before World War I can be viewed as a contingent rule, or a rule with escape clauses (Grossman and Van Huyck, 1988;DeKock and Grilli, 1989;Flood and Isard, 1989;Bordo and Kydland, 1995). The monetary authority maintains the standard --keeps the price of the currency in terms of gold fixed --except in the event of a well understood emergency such as a major war.…”
Section: The Gold Standard As a Commitment Mechanismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…18 Grossman and Van Huyck (1988) developed a model whereby, consistent with the first two "facts," sovereign defaults occur as bad outcomes of debt-servicing obligations that are implicitly contingent on the realized state of the world. 19 They maintain that lenders sharply differentiate excusable defaults that are justifiable when associated with implicitly understood contingencies from debt repudiation, which is deemed inexcusable.…”
Section: Understanding Sovereign Debt Maturity and Indexation As A mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We then review the main policy proposals related to these topics and advance some implications derived from our work. In Alfaro and Kanczuk (2005 a, b, c), we modeled sovereign debt as a contingent claim following the framework proposed by Grossman and Van Huyck (1988). Consistent with the stylized facts of sovereign borrowing, these authors developed a model in which sovereign defaults occur as bad outcomes of debtservicing obligations that are implicitly contingent on the realized state of the world.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thus when default is prevalent within a country's local network, default at -! home may be "excusable" (Grossman and Huyck 1988) in that it can be attributed to adverse…”
Section: Network Interdependence and Defaultmentioning
confidence: 99%