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Keywords:Loans, Foreign 

Journal Article
Statement to Congress, June 27, 1989 (bank supervisory policies regarding U.S. bank lending to developing countries)

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Aug , Pages 563-565

Working Paper
Bank foreign lending, mandatory disclosure rules and the reaction of bank stock prices to the Mexican debt crisis

Working Papers , Paper 86-14

Journal Article
Collective action difficulties in foreign lending: banks and bonds

FRBSF Economic Letter

Working Paper
Optimal foreign borrowing and investment with an endogenous lending constraint

Working Papers in Applied Economic Theory , Paper 86-02

Report
International business cycles with endogenous incomplete markets

Backus, Kehoe and Kydland (1992), Baxter and Crucini (1995) and Stockman and Tesar (1995) find two major discrepancies between standard international business cycle models with complete markets and the data: In the models, cross-country correlations are much higher for consumption than for output, while in the data the opposite is true; and cross-country correlations of employment and investment are negative, while in the data they are positive. This paper introduces a friction into a standard model that helps resolve these anomalies. The friction is that international loans are imperfectly ...
Staff Report , Paper 265

Report
Loan swaps and the LDC debt problem

Research Paper , Paper 8615

Report
Latin American international loan defaults in the 1930s: lessons for the 1980s?

Research Paper , Paper 8812

Journal Article
LDC lending after the crisis

FRBSF Economic Letter

Journal Article
LDC debt rescheduling: calculating who gains, who loses

Business Review , Issue Nov , Pages 13-23

Working Paper
Debt conversions: economic issues for heavily indebted developing countries

This paper is a general discussion of debt conversions in heavily indebted developing countries. The paper first describes the three different types of transactions that are commonly called debt conversions. Next the paper discusses programs that have been established in Chile, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, and the Philippines to facilitate these transactions. Then the different ways in which commercial banks can participate in these transactions and the volume of these transactions to date are discussed. The paper concludes with a discussion of a broad range of economic issues raised by these ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 315

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