Enforcement problems and secondary markets
In: Discussion paper series 6498
In: International macroeconomics
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In: Discussion paper series 6498
In: International macroeconomics
In: Discussion paper series 6055
In: International macroeconomics
In: Discussion paper series 6249
In: International macroeconomics
In: IMF working paper 04/131
In: Journal of Monetary Economics, Band 55, Heft 3, S. 592-605
In: NBER Working Paper No. w16640
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In: Journal of Monetary Economics, Band 53, Heft 4, S. 699-724
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Working paper
In: IMF Working Paper, S. 1-35
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In: CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP15309
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Working paper
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Working paper
In: American economic review, Band 100, Heft 4, S. 1523-1555
ISSN: 1944-7981
Conventional wisdom says that, in the absence of default penalties, sovereign risk destroys all foreign asset trade. We show that this conventional wisdom rests on one implicit assumption: that assets cannot be retraded in secondary markets. Without this assumption, foreign asset trade is possible even in the absence of default penalties. This result suggests a broader perspective regarding the origins of sovereign risk and its remedies. Sovereign risk affects foreign asset trade only if default penalties are insufficient and secondary markets work imperfectly. To reduce its effects, one can either increase default penalties or improve the working of secondary markets. (JEL F34, G12, G15)
In: NBER Working Paper No. w13559
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We analyze the conduct of fiscal policy in a financially integrated union in the presence of financial frictions. Frictions create a wedge between the return to investment and the union interest rate. This leads to an over-spending externality. While the social cost of spending is the return to investment, governments care mostly about the (depressed) interest rate they face. In other words, the crowding out effects of public spending are partly "exported" to the rest of the union. We argue that it may be hard for the union to deal with this externality through the design of fiscal rules, which are bound to be shaped by the preferences of the median country and not by efficiency considerations. We also analyze how this overspending externality - and the unions ability to deal with it effectively changes when the union is financially integrated with the rest of the world. Finally, we extend our model by introducing a zero lower bound on interest rates and show that, it financial frictions are severe enough, the union is pushed into a liquidity trap and the direction of the spending externality is reversed. At such times, fiscal rules that are appropriate during normal times might backre.
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