Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Historical Context: The Export of Capital and Sovereign Debt Crises, 1815–1914
Part I: External Financing during the Interwar Period and the Great Depression, 1919–39
2. Private Market Lending
3. Debt Service Disruptions
4. International Relations and Interwar External Sovereign Debts
Part II: External Sovereign Debt, Syndicated Bank Loans, and Sovereign Debt Crises in Developing Countries, 1955–94
5. Flow of External Capital to the Developing World after World War II, 1955–73
6. From Petrodollar Recycling to Debt Recycling, Syndicated Bank Loans and Sovereign Debt Crises, 1974–83
7. Debt Service Disruption and Bank Debt Restructurings, 1955–94
8. Debt Restructuring and International Relations, 1955–94
Part III: Globalization, Financial Sector Liberalization, and Emerging Market Crises, 1990–2005
9. The Flow of Capital to Emerging Markets, 1990–2005
10. Emerging Market Crises and the Mexican Crisis, 1994–97
11. The East Asian Crisis, 1997–2003
12. Crisis Resolution in Korea, 1997–2003
13. The Turkish Crisis, 2001–05
14. The Argentine Crisis, 2001–04
Part IV: The Great Recession and Crises in the Advanced Economies, 2007–15
15. The Japanese Crisis as a Precursor to Crises in the Advanced Economies
16. Causes of the U.S. Crisis, 2007–10
17. Ad Hoc Interventions before the Lehman Brothers Collapse
18. A Systemic Approach to Crisis Resolution after the Lehman Brothers Collapse
19. The Great Recession: From Financial Crisis to Economic Crisis
20. The Eurozone Crisis, 2008–15
21. The Eurozone Crisis: From Banking Crises to Sovereign Debt Crises to Bailouts
22. Conclusion: Are We Prepared for the Next One?
Appendixes
A. A Comparative Overview of Debt-Crisis Regimes: From the Great Depression through the Great Recession
B. Commercial Bank Debt Restructurings with Sovereign Debtors, 1980–89
Notes
Index