IMF Staff Papers, Volume 56, No. 4

Volume/Issue: Volume 2009 Issue 004
Publication date: November 2009
ISBN: 9781589069107
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Topics covered in this book

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Banks and Banking , Exports and Imports , Finance , Economics- Macroeconomics , SP , default episode , home terms of trade , terms-of-trade shock , terms-of-trade response , productivity gain , debt projection , Monetary unions , Total factor productivity , Real effective exchange rates , Trade credits , Stock markets , Africa , Global , Caribbean , Baltics , Southeast Asia

Summary

This paper empirically evaluates four types of costs that may result from an international sovereign default: reputational costs, international trade exclusion costs, costs to the domestic economy through the financial system, and political costs to the authorities. It finds that the economic costs are generally significant but short-lived, and sometimes do not operate through conventional channels. The political consequences of a debt crisis, by contrast, seem to be particularly dire for incumbent governments and finance ministers, broadly in line with what happens in currency crises.