RP2006/50
Basudeb Guha-Khasnobis and Saibal Kar:
The
Corporate Debt Market: A Firm-Level Panel Study for India (PDF
124KB)
Traditionally, firms in India have shown a low preference towards debt financing,
despite its advantages. Using panel data from 450 firms during 1992-93 and 2003-04,
we attempt to identify factors which could explain the pattern of financing of
manufacturing firms in India and the key determinants of their debt structure. We
examine the roles of age of the firm, long term borrowing and net sales in affecting its
debt structure.
RP2007/14
Indranil Dutta: The
Burden of Government Debt in the Indian States: Implications for the MDG Poverty
Target (PDF 175KB)
In this paper we explore what impact, if any, government debts have on achieving the
Millennium Development Goals for the Indian states. To fulfill the goals, national
governments, especially in the developing world, have to undertake major investments
in the social sector; but how much they will really be able to do so will depend on the
conditions of their finances. For the Indian states we find that government investment in
the social sector is extremely important to reduce poverty, but the government’s debt
burden is actually stopping several states from attaining the MDG targets. Although, in
the medium term the impact of the debt on poverty is not very harmful, in the longer run
it has a significant negative impact. Therefore for policy purposes reduction in debt
should be given a priority.
RP2006/11
Silvia Marchesi and Laura Sabani: Prolonged
Use and Conditionality Failure: Investigating IMF Responsibility (PDF 98KB)
Since the 1970s, prolonged use of resources by the IMF has consistently expanded,
among both low- and middle-income countries. Overall, this phenomenon suggests a
lack of effectiveness of Fund supported programmes. In the literature conditional
lending failure has been explained by looking both at the characteristics of the
borrowing countries (demand-side factors) and at the possible influence of IMF specific
interests (supply-side factors). Among the latter it has been suggested that noncompliance
with conditionality might be attributed to the lack of credibility of the IMF
threat of interrupting financial assistance in case of policy slippages. In this paper we
critically review this literature and we propose a novel explanation, according to which
it is the repeated nature of the IMF involvement, together with the fact that the Fund
acts simultaneously as a lender and as a monitor (and as an advisor) of economic
reforms, that weakens the credibility of the IMF threat. Specifically, we argue that …/
RP2006/09
Tony Addison:
International Finance and the Developing World: The Next Twenty Years
(PDF 98KB)
Much has changed in international finance in the twenty years since UNU-WIDER was
founded. This paper identifies five broad contours of what we might expect in the next
twenty years: the flow of capital from ageing societies to the more youthful economies of
the South; the growth in the financial services industry in emerging economies and the
consequences for their capital flows; the current strength in emerging market debt, and
whether this represents a change in fundamentals or merely the effect of low global
interest rates; the impact of globalization in goods markets in lowering inflation
expectations, and therefore global bond yields; and the implications of the adjustment in
global imbalances between Asia (in particular China) and the United States for emerging
bond markets as a whole. The paper ends by noting the paradox that today we see ever
larger amounts of capital flowing across the globe in search of superior investment
returns, and yet the financing needs of the poorer countries are still largely unmet.
Keywords: international
RP2005/76
Panicos O. Demetriades and Svetlana Andrianova:
Sources
and Effectiveness of Financial Development: What We Know and What We Need to
Know (PDF 131KB)
Drawing on recent literature, the paper argues that institutions and political economy
factors hold the key to understanding why some countries have succeeded in developing
their financial systems while others have not. The paper also reviews new evidence
which suggests that institutional quality may influence the effectiveness of financial
development in delivering economic growth. These new findings highlight the
possibility that poor countries may be stuck in a bad equilibrium, in which weak
institutions inhibit growth both directly and indirectly, through under-developed, lowquality
finance. In addition, the paper identifies a number of unanswered questions in
the financial development literature, including the precise role of important institutions
like law in finance, and the influence of geographical factors.
RP2005/74
Fabrizio Carmignani and Abdur Chowdhury: Does
Financial Openness Promote Economic Integration? Some Evidence from Europe and
the CIS (PDF 107KB)
Drawing on recent literature, the paper argues that institutions and political economy
factors hold the key to understanding why some countries have succeeded in developing
their financial systems while others have not. The paper also reviews new evidence
which suggests that institutional quality may influence the effectiveness of financial
development in delivering economic growth. These new findings highlight the
possibility that poor countries may be stuck in a bad equilibrium, in which weak
institutions inhibit growth both directly and indirectly, through under-developed, lowquality
finance. In addition, the paper identifies a number of unanswered questions in
the financial development literature, including the precise role of important institutions
like law in finance, and the influence of geographical factors.
DP2003/16
Robbie Mochrie: Economic
and Theological Approaches to Debt Cancellation (PDF
182KB)
Differences in economic and theological approaches to debt cancellation result from
differences in disciplinary assumptions in respect of purpose, method, and argument.
We argue that they provide alternative commentaries upon the need for debt
cancellation, but that it is not possible to demonstrate the superiority of one over the
other, so practitioners in one are likely to continue to find it difficult to respond
meaningfully to arguments from the other.
|
Committee for the abolition of the Third World Debt
The
Committee for the Cancellation of the Third World Debt (the CADTM -
Comité pour l’annulation de la dette du Tiers Monde) is an
international network of individuals and local committees from across
Europe and Latin America, Africa and Asia. It was founded in Belgium on
15th March 1990. The network acts in close liaison with other movements
and organisations fighting for the same ideals. Its main preoccupation,
besides the debt issue, is the planning of activities and radical
alternatives for the creation of a world respectful of people’s
fundamental rights, needs and (...)more
Themes
|
July 28, 2004
Report on the evaluation of the role of the IMF in
Argentina, 1991-2001
|
Global Development Finance 2004 |
Global Development Finance 2003 |
Global Development Finance 2002 |
The
Argentinian crisis
Argentinian media
Foreign Affairs: Argentina
takes action
Jubilee Plus: Argentina's
crisis
A. Pettifor et al, Creditor
co-responsability for Argentina's crisis - and the need for independent resolution,
2001
M. Weisbrot, How the IMF messed up Argentina, 2001
P. Krugman,
A cross of dollars, 2001
P. Krugman, Notes on
depreciation, the yen, and the argentino, 2001
P. Krugman, Argentina: Money
monomania, 2001
J. D. Sachs, The
strategic significance of global inequality, 2001
A. Beattie, A
better way for countries to default, 2001
Latin
American Information Agency
Argentina and the IMF
A. Krueger, International
Financial Architecture for 2002: a new approach to sovereign debt restructuring, 2001
--------- |
High Frequency Debt On-line
Database (OECD) |
External debt 1991/1996 Low-income and Middle-income countries
External debt and Gross Domestic Product, 1980-1994 |
External debt, Gross National Product and Exports, 1980-1994 |
Debt service, exports and type of debt, 1980-1994 |
External Debt 1980,1983-1994 (19 Latin American countries) |
ELDIS: Finance and credit |
J2000USA: Drop the Debt |
LOGA: Foreign Aid, Debt Relief, UN Funding |
High Frequency Debt Data (BIS, IMF,
OECD, World Bank)
High Frequency Debt On-line
Database (OECD) |
Global
Development Finance 1998 Volume I
Global
Development Finance 1999 Volume I
Global
Development Finance 1999 Country Tables
Global
Development Finance 2000 Volume I
Global
Development Finance 2000 Country Tables |
Global Development Finance 2002 |
Global Development Finance 2003 |
Global Development Finance 2004 |
Comité por la Anulación de la Deuda Externa
-
Deuda odiosa:
-
Argentina: La deuda odiosa,
por Fernando Krakowiak - 22 enero 2005
-
La deuda de Irak no existe
por Damien Millet - 10 enero 2005
-
Hacia una anulación del
100% de la deuda multilateral de los países en desarrollo por Sébastien Fourmy -
8 noviembre 2004
-
Proyecto para declarar la
nulidad de la deuda externa de la dictadura argentina por varios autores - 3
noviembre 2004
-
El apoyo del Banco Mundial y
del FMI a las dictaduras por Eric Toussaint - 22 agosto 2004
-
Argentina y la pesada carga
de la deuda externa, por Issac Yuyo Rudnik - 13 junio 2004
-
Caído el Déspota, caída
la Deuda, por Laura Ramos - 1 marzo 2004
-
Deuda y Negocio en Irak,
porIolanda Fresnillo - 30 enero 2004
-
Historia de la deuda externa
boliviana, por Luis Alberto Echazú - 29 enero 2004
-
ENTREVISTA A JULIO GAMBINA, DIRECTOR DE ATTAC ARGENTINA
Argentina: “Desconocer
al Fondo”, por Pagina 12 - 15 enero 2004
-
LA POSGUERRA: EE.UU.QUIERE QUE SOLO SE PERDONEN LOS PRESTAMOS TOMADOS POR SADDAM
Controversia por las deudas
contraídas por los dictadores, por El Clarín - 22 diciembre 2003
-
LA RESPONSABILIDAD DEL GOBIERNO DE LULA
Brasil: la actualidad de la
auditoría de la deuda, por Eric Toussaint - septiembre 2003
-
DEL PROBLEMA DE LA NULIDAD DEL ACTO JURIDICO A LA RESPONSABILIDAD DE LAS IFIS Y DE LAS
MUTINACIONALES.
Deuda odiosa o deuda nula,
por Hugo Ruiz Diaz - diciembre 2002
---------------- |
---------
La crisis en Argentina
Argentina:
medios de comunicación
Jubilee Plus: La crisis
argentina
Agencia
Latinoamericana de Información
---------
|
Comite pour l'annulation de la dette du tiers monde |
Dette
extérieure et liberté de circulation des capitaux
par Eric Toussaint
(19 juin 2004) |
Dette et
développement
par Hugo Ruiz Diaz
(13 mai 2004) |
La dette
face à la démocratie
par Plate-forme « Dette & Développement »
(29 mars 2004) |
La dette des
pays en développement : bilan et perspectives
par Éric Berr
(13 décembre 2003) |
TROIS ANS APRÈS
"DAKAR 2000"
Mettre
fin au scandale de la dette du Tiers Monde
par Demba Moussa Dembélé
(5 décembre 2003) |
ALCA &
dette : les deux faces d’une même domination
par Claudio Katz
(1er décembre 2003) |
ENDETTEMENT
DE L’AFRIQUE SUBSAHARIENNE AU DÉBUT DU XXIE SIÈCLE
L’afrique créancière ou
débitrice ?
par Eric Toussaint
(10 novembre 2003) |
CAMPAGNE
"ABOLIR LA DETTE POUR LIBÉRER LE DÉVELOPPEMENT"
Soigner ou rembourser ?
La dette contre la santé
par Stéphane Desguain
(26 septembre 2003) [Là-bas si j’y suis]
Annulons la dette !
par Là-bas si j’y suis
(11 juin 2003)
Les crises de la dette
extérieure d’Amérique latine au XIXe & XXe siècle
par Eric Toussaint
(20 mai 2003)
L’origine de la crise de
la dette du tiers-monde
par Eric Toussaint , Damien Millet
(16 avril 2003)
Et si on abolissait la dette du
Tiers-Monde ?
par Eric Toussaint
(1er avril 2003)
La dette au banc... des
accusés
par Olivier Bailly
(septembre 2002)
Dette extérieure, une nouvelle
forme de colonialisme
par Jordi Gagete Mateos
( 2002)
"LE BATEAU IVRE DE LA
MONDIALISATION"
Un tour du village
planétaire
par Arnaud Zacharie , Eric Toussaint
( 2000) |
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