There is a rich scholarly literature on sovereign default on external
debt. Comparatively little is known about sovereign defaults on domestic
debt. Even today, cross-country data on domestic public debt remains
curiously exotic, particularly prior to the 1980s. We have filled this
gap in the literature by compiling a database on central government
public debt (external and domestic). The data span 1914 to 2007 for most
countries, reaching back into the nineteenth century for many. Our
findings on debt sustainability, sovereign defaults, the temptation to
inflate, and the hierarchy of creditors only scratch the surface of what
the domestic public debt data can reveal. First, domestic debt is big
-- for the 64 countries for which we have long time series, domestic
debt accounts for almost two-thirds of total public debt. For most of
the sample, this debt carries a market interest rate (except for the
financial repression era between WWII and financial liberalization).
Second, the data go a long ways toward explaining the puzzle of why
countries so often default on their external debts at seemingly low debt
thresholds. Third, domestic debt has largely been ignored in the vast
empirical work on inflation. In fact, domestic debt (a significant
portion of which is long term and non-indexed) is often much larger than
the monetary base in the run-up to high inflation episodes. Last, the
widely-held view that domestic residents are strictly junior to external
creditors does not find broad support.
Source: http://www.learningace.com/doc/697948/3d6c3bc2ca4c8f81f6b3aeebe02a47a9/forgotten_history_of_domestic_debt
Other link: http://www.nber.org/papers/w13946
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