National debts incurred by illegitimate regimes against the best interests of the citizens is a serious problem of international economics and politics. These sovereign debts, often referred to as odious debts, deplete the public purse and create an ongoing financial liability that serves to constrain investment and economic growth, and conspires to keep millions in poverty. This important and timely book explains the legal principles and politics involved in the issue of odious debts, and sovereign debt arrangements more generally. The author goes beyond abstract arguments and proposes legal rules and international regulation that should be put in place to create the right incentives to stop the transmission of odious debts. Her proposal is for a registration scheme for sovereign debt, and the imposition of positive duties on financiers who provide loans to sovereign borrowers.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Wong: Sovereign Finance and the Poverty of Nations: Odious Debt in International Law
Yvonne Wong (Univ. of New South Wales) has published Sovereign Finance And The Poverty Of Nations: Odious Debt in International Law (Edward Elgar Publishing 2012). Here's the abstract: