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Hope Springs Eternal: French Bondholders and the Repudiation of Russian Sovereign Debt

Part of the Yale Series in Economic and Financial History series
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In 1918, the Soviet revolutionary government repudiated the Tsarist regime's sovereign debt, triggering one of the biggest sovereign defaults ever.

Yet the price of Russian bonds remained high for years.

Combing French archival records, Kim Oosterlinck shows that, far from irrational, investors had legitimate reasons to hope for repayment.

Soviet debt recognition, a change in government, a bailout by the French government, or French banks, or a seceding country would have guaranteed at least a partial reimbursement.

As Greece and other European countries raise the possibility of sovereign default, Oosterlinck's superbly researched study is more urgent than ever.

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£55.00
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300220936 / 9780300220933
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
28/05/2016
English
244 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%