I use data on 180 sovereign defaults to analyze what determines the recovery rate after a debt restructuring process. Why do creditors recover, in some cases, more than 90 %, while in other cases they recover less than 10 %? I find support for the Grossman and Van Huyk model of “excusable defaults”: countries that experience more severe negative shocks tend to have higher “haircuts” than countries that face less severe shocks. I discuss in detail debt restructuring episodes in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Greece. The results suggest that the haircut imposed by Argentina in its 2005 restructuring (75 %) was “excessively high.” The other episodes’ haircuts are consistent with the model.
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Univ New Orleans, New Orleans, LA 70148 USAUniv New Orleans, New Orleans, LA 70148 USA
Hassan, M. Kabir
Ngene, Geoffrey M.
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Mercer Univ, Stetson Sch Business & Econ, Macon, GA 31207 USAUniv New Orleans, New Orleans, LA 70148 USA
Ngene, Geoffrey M.
Yu, Jung-Suk
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Dankook Univ, Sch Urban Planning & Real Estate Studies, Coll Social Sci, Yonginsi Si 448701, Gyeonggi Do, South KoreaUniv New Orleans, New Orleans, LA 70148 USA