This setting lets you change the way you view articles. You can choose to have articles open in a dialog window, a new tab, or directly in the same window.
Open in Dialog
Open in New Tab
Open in same window
Open in New Tab
Open in same window

Journal of Economic Perspectives: Vol. 5 No. 2 (Spring 1991)
JEP Volume. 5, Issue 2 |
Previous ArticleNext Article
Sign up for Email Alerts Follow us on Twitter
Full-text Article (Complimentary)
View Comments on This Article (0) | Login to post a comment
Previous ArticleNext Article
Expand
Quick Tools:
Print Article Summary Email Link to this Article Export CitationSign up for Email Alerts Follow us on Twitter
Explore:
Historical Research on International Lending and Debt
Article Citation
Eichengreen, Barry. 1991. "Historical Research on International Lending and Debt."
Journal of Economic Perspectives,
5(2): 149-169.
DOI: 10.1257/jep.5.2.149
DOI: 10.1257/jep.5.2.149
Abstract
The parallels between debt crises past and present have attracted a large number of social scientists to the history of foreign lending and default. In this article, I describe the findings of the recent literature on the subject. The questions posed have obvious relevance to the current policy debate over the debt of less-developed countries. What features of international capital markets have long rendered them vulnerable to generalized crisis? What events tend to spawn debt-servicing difficulties and to provoke default? What have been the consequences of default for lenders and borrowers? What approaches historically have proven most effective at clearing away the residue of debt crises? I concentrate on 20th century experience: on the lending of the 1920s, on the debt crisis of the 1930s, and on the recovery of capital markets after World War II.
Article Full-Text Access
Full-text Article (Complimentary)
Authors
Eichengreen, Barry (U CA Berkeley and NBER)
JEL Classifications
N20: Economic History: Financial Markets and Institutions: General, International, or Comparative
F34: International Lending and Debt Problems
F34: International Lending and Debt Problems
Comments
View Comments on This Article (0) | Login to post a comment

