External Borrowing by the Baltics, Russia and Other Countries of the Former Soviet Union: Developments and Policy Issues
43 Pages Posted: 15 Feb 2006
There are 2 versions of this paper
External Borrowing by the Baltics, Russia and Other Countries of the Former Soviet Union: Developments and Policy Issues
External Borrowing by the Baltics, Russia and Other Countries of the Former Soviet Union: Developments and Policy Issues
Date Written: June 1997
Abstract
Many countries among the Baltics, Russia and other CIS states are increasingly borrowing on international capital markets, a development that generally reflects their success in achieving financial stabilization. In view of the low level of domestic saving and large capital requirements, recourse to foreign borrowing may of course generate significant benefits for these economies in transition. However, the rapid increase in external debt suggests that consideration also needs to be given to the risks from too high a dependence on foreign saving, including inter alia risk of the postponement of needed structural reforms.
Keywords: external financing, external debt, capital market borrowing
JEL Classification: F34, H63
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Rationale and Design of Inflation-Indexed Bonds
By Robert Price
-
Crowding Out or Crowding in? The Economic Consequences of Financing Government Deficits
-
New Information from Inflation Swaps and Index-Linked Bonds
By Matthew Hurd
-
The Concept of Indexation in the History of Economic Thought
-
Recent Developments in Sterling Inflation-Linked Markets
By Grellan Mcgrath and Robin Windle
-
A Comparison of Long Bond Yields in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Germany
By Martin Brooke, Andrew Clare, ...
-
The Role of Fiscal Policy in Sustainable Stabilization: Evidence from Latin America