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Paper #1284

Título:
Risk sharing with the monarch: Excusable defaults and contingent debt in the age of Philip II, 1556-1598
Autores:
Maurizio Drelichman y Joachim Voth
Data:
Junio 2011
Resumen:
Contingent sovereign debt can create important welfare gains. Nonetheless, there is almost no issuance today. Using hand-collected archival data, we examine the first known case of large-scale use of state-contingent sovereign debt in history. Philip II of Spain entered into hundreds of contracts whose value and due date depended on verifiable, exogenous events such as the arrival of silver fleets. We show that this allowed for effective risk-sharing between the king and his bankers. The existence of statecontingent debt also sheds light on the nature of defaults – they were simply contingencies over which Crown and bankers had not contracted previously.
Palabras clave:
sovereign debt, syndication, diversification, risk transfer, Spain
Códigos JEL:
F34, G15, N23
Área de investigación:
História Económica y de la Empresa / Macroeconomía y Economía Internacional
Publicado en:
Cliometrica, forthcoming

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