Cover image for Debt Relief and Beyond : Lessons Learned and Challenges Ahead.
Debt Relief and Beyond : Lessons Learned and Challenges Ahead.
Title:
Debt Relief and Beyond : Lessons Learned and Challenges Ahead.
Author:
Primo Braga, Carlos A.
ISBN:
9780821378755
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (404 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contributors -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Part I: Debt Relief -- 1 Debt Relief to Low-Income Countries: A Retrospective -- 2 Debt Relief and Education in Heavily Indebted Poor Countries -- 3 Is Debt Relief Good for the Poor? The Effects of the HIPC Initiative on Infant Mortality -- 4 Drivers of Growth in Fragile States: Has the HIPC Process Helped Fragile Countries Grow? -- Part II: Debt Sustainability -- 5 Debt Sustainability in Low-Income Countries: Recent Experience and Challenges Ahead -- 6 Debt Relief and Sustainable Financing to Meet the MDGs -- 7 Sovereign Default Risk and Private Sector Access to Capital in Emerging Markets -- 8 Lessons from Market-Access Countries on Public Debt Sustainability and Growth -- Part III: Odious Debt -- 9 The Concept of Odious Debt: Some Considerations -- 10 Odious Debt as a Principal-Agent Problem -- 11 The Economics of Odious Debt -- Part IV: Debt Management -- 12 Government Debt Management in Low-Income Countries -- 13 Debut Sovereign Bond Issues: Strategic Considerations and Determinants of Characteristics -- 14 Subnational Debt Management by Low-Income Countries in Transition to Market Access -- 15 Managing Volatility: Fiscal Policy, Debt Management, and Oil Revenues in the Republic of Congo -- 16 Debt-Swap Mechanisms Revisited: Lessons from the Chilean Experience of the 1980s -- Index -- Back cover.
Abstract:
The history of debt relief goes back several decades. It reveals that a country's accumulation of unsustainable debt stems from such factors as deficiencies in macroeconomic management, adverse terms-of-trade shocks, and poor governance. Debt-relief initiatives have provided debt-burdened countries with the opportunity for a fresh start, but whether the benefits of debt relief can be preserved depends on transformations in a country's policies and institutions.In 1996, the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative was launched as the first comprehensive, multilateral, debt-relief framework for low-income countries. In 2005, the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative was established, which increased the level of debt relief provided to HIPCs. As of early 2009, assistance through these two initiatives had been committed to 35 countries and amounted to US117 billion in nominal terms, or half of the 2007 GDP of these countries.Debt Relief and Beyond assesses the implications of debt relief for low-income countries and how its benefits can be preserved and used to fight poverty. The chapter authors bring unique operational experience to their examination of debt relief, debt sustainability, and debt management. Several key questions are addressed, including:What consequences does debt relief have for poverty-reducing expenditures, growth, and access to finance? Can debt relief guarantee debt sustainability? How can debt management at all levels of government be improved? What lessons can be learned from countries that have experienced debt restructuring? Finally, this book provides sound empirical evidence using current econometric techniques.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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