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SOVEREIGN DEBT RESTRUCTURING: RE-CONCEIVING LEGAL SOLUTIONS FOR IMPROVING DEBT MANAGEMENT by Jeremy William Trickett A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Masters of Law Faculty of Law University of Toronto © Copyright by Jeremy William Trickett 2011

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SOVEREIGN DEBT RESTRUCTURING: RE-CONCEIVING LEGAL SOLUTIONS FOR IMPROVING

DEBT MANAGEMENT

by

Jeremy William Trickett

A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Masters of Law

Faculty of Law University of Toronto

© Copyright by Jeremy William Trickett 2011

 

 

ii

Sovereign Debt Restructuring: Re-Conceiving Legal Solutions for Improving Debt Management

Jeremy W. Trickett

Masters of Law

Faculty of Law University of Toronto

2011

Abstract

The recent financial crisis and subsequent sovereign debt distress in the eurozone has

reinvigorated the debate over bailouts and sovereign debt restructuring. This paper analyzes

the effectiveness of two approaches to debt management in addressing the practical

challenges of debt workouts, particularly in relation to developing countries: a contractual

approach and a sovereign bankruptcy approach. The paper uses an economic analysis of

private law to analyze optimal solutions to those problems and proposes a flexible approach

to debt restructuring. Drawing on theoretical research and experience from professionals in

the technical aspects of the debt markets, the paper merges traditional solutions with the law

and development concept of “odious debt”. It argues that potential legal elaborations of the

concept of odious debt, shaped by a contractual approach, presents loan sanctions as an

effective ex ante solution to contemporary problems of sovereign debt management a current

climate of global sovereign debt distress.

 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................ 1

2. SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT ............................................................................................. 5

2.1 The Financial Crisis .................................................................................................................... 8

2.2 Developing and Developed Market Convergence .................................................................. 10

3. CONTRACTUAL SOLUTIONS ....................................................................................................... 13

3.1 Contract Modification .............................................................................................................. 15

3.2 Collective Action Clauses ......................................................................................................... 17

3.2.1 New Interest in an Old Idea .................................................................................................. 18

3.2.2 Possibilities and Problems .................................................................................................... 20

3.2.3 Greece’s Sovereign Debt ....................................................................................................... 24

3.2.4 A Partial Solution .................................................................................................................. 26

4. SOVEREIGN BANKRUPTCY ......................................................................................................... 27

4.1 Status Quo ................................................................................................................................. 28

4.2 Domestic Bankruptcy: Collective Action, Standstills and Interim Financing .................... 30

4.3 The Challenge of Implementation ........................................................................................... 33

4.4 Balancing Bailouts and Barriers to Restructuring ................................................................ 35

5. ODIOUS DEBT & LOAN SANCTIONS ......................................................................................... 40

5.1 Odious Debt ............................................................................................................................... 41

5.1.1 Profligate Borrowers ............................................................................................................. 41

5.1.2 Odiousness: A Moving Target .............................................................................................. 41

5.1.3 Implementation ...................................................................................................................... 46

5.2 Loan Sanctions .......................................................................................................................... 48

5.2.1 Debt Management & Diplomacy .......................................................................................... 50

5.2.2 Ex post Benefits of an Ex Ante Approach ............................................................................ 51

5.2.3 Overcoming Challenges ........................................................................................................ 53

6. CONCLUSION ................................................................................................................................... 57

 

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1. INTRODUCTION

Emerging concurrently with food and fuel crises, the financial crisis that began in 2007 and

intensified in the fourth quarter of 2008 developed into a global economic crisis that has

rekindled interest in sovereign debt crises among scholars and policymakers alike. Almost four

years after the onset of the crisis, global financial stability is still not assured and significant

policy challenges remain to be addressed. Countries are taking aggressive measures to address

the impact of the crisis, variously easing monetary policies, recapitalizing financial systems,

bailing out corporations, and overhauling financial regulatory systems. In addition to monetary

strategies, governments have adopted counter-cyclical fiscal policies, introducing fiscal stimulus

packages.1 Balance sheet restructuring in developed countries is incomplete and proceeding

slowly and leverage is still high, which will inevitably force policymakers in those countries to

make difficult choices.

In 2008, the net sovereign borrowing needs of the UK and the US were five times higher than the

average of the preceding five years.2 The International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicts that gross

financing needs in advanced economies, which surged in 2010, will rise further in 2011 and

remain high in 2012. Government interventions led to an increased supply of sovereign debt,

with serious implications for growth and debt sustainability outlooks in both high- and low-

                                                                                                                         1 Fiscal deficits in advanced economies stood at about 1.1 percent of GDP in 2007 and rose to 8.8 percent in 2009. Fiscal policy continued to support economic activity in 2010. The average headline deficit in advanced economies was 7.75 percent of GDP. Shortfalls are emerging in some economies with respect to what was envisaged in medium-term fiscal adjustment plans, reflecting new stimulus measures (US), more pessimistic macroeconomic projections from the IMF (Canada and Portugal), natural disasters (Japan), and a worsened outlook for sub-national governments (Canada). In contrast, many EU advanced economies’ fiscal adjustment is expected to remain as planned, while Germany is expected to experience stronger growth. In all, the average deficit for advanced economies is expected to fall by 0.75 percent of GDP to seven percent. In cyclically adjusted terms, the improvement amounts to 0.25 percent of GDP, far less than projected by the IMF only months ago, given that deficits remain well above the levels that would stabilize debt ratios. See International Monetary Fund, “Shifting Gears: Tackling Challenges on the Road to Fiscal Adjustment” (2001) Fiscal Monitor, online: International Monetary Fund <http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fm/2011/01/pdf/fm1101.pdf>.

2 Carlos A. Primo Braga & Gallina A. Vincelette, eds, Sovereign Debt and the Financial Crisis (Washington, DC: The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank, 2011) [Braga, “Sovereign Debt”] at 2.

 

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income countries. Historically, periods of high indebtedness have been associated with a rising

incidence of defaults and public debt restructuring, the evidence correlating high levels of public

debt with lower growth.3

A lacuna exists in the international capital markets when it comes to institutional mechanisms

addressing the consequences of sovereign debt crises, which has long been recognized as

problematic by practitioners and scholars in the international financial community. The financial

and social disruptions caused by recent sovereign debt crises serve to emphasize the importance

of devising workable mechanisms to facilitate sovereign debt restructuring. There is a need for

reform in sovereign debt management that takes into account the legitimacy of borrowing while

also acknowledging the diversity of debt products and sovereign debt creditors in a way that

apportions risk among market participants. That is, reform should compel private creditors to

share the risk of the issuing sovereign debt and facilitate their participation in debt restructuring.

There are two main reasons for attempting to reach a common understanding of the

responsibilities of sovereign borrowers and their lenders, particularly with regard to developing

economies. First, the flow of capital to both developed and developing sovereign debtors is of

paramount importance to the global economy: industrialized countries rely on it to finance their

budget deficits; developing countries, for economic growth. Any destabilization to this key

component of the international financial system makes credit less available and more costly.

Second, sovereign finance is uniquely unforgiving of mistakes. Unlike corporate and personal

debt, there exists no formal bankruptcy procedure with which sovereign debt can be restructured

according to pre-established rules. When a foreign debtor will not pay, a lender has few options.

There exists no international court to pass judgment on a default and no international police to

enforce its decision. Legally, sovereign debt is ineradicable, absent creditor consent. The

overarching concern is this: high sovereign external debt constitutes a serious drain on a

country’s scarce resources. Reckless sovereign lending and incompetent sovereign debt

restructuring have incalculable human costs, particularly for developing countries that are

                                                                                                                         3 Carmen M. Reinhart & M. Belen Sbrancia, “The Liquidation of Government Debt” (2011) Work Paper 11-10 Peterson Institute for International Economics at 2, online: Peterson Institute for International Economics <http://www.piie.com/publications/wp/wp11-10.pdf>.

 

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especially sensitive to economic crises. Debt servicing costs can create a shortage of liquidity,

crowding out investment and social services spending and slowing saving.

This paper analyzes doctrinal and institutional mechanisms that have been proposed to address

the problems of sovereign debt management, particularly in relation to developing countries.

Evaluating the practical challenges of such proposals, it adopts an integrated approach by

drawing on theoretical research and experience from professionals in the technical and

operational aspects of the sovereign debt markets. The paper uses an economic analysis of

private law to analyze optimal solutions to those problems and proposes a flexible, case-by-case

approach to debt restructuring that allows states and their creditors to call on various tools, as

needed. The paper scrutinizes two options that help minimize bailouts: a free market option,

where sovereigns and their creditors use existing contractual characteristics of sovereign debt

documentation to effectively negotiate debt restructuring; and a statutory option, where

sovereigns and their creditors would be bound by a sovereign debt restructuring mechanism.

The paper merges these two traditional debt restructuring techniques with the law and

development concept of ‘odious debt’.4 It argues that potential legal elaborations of the concept

of odious debt, still chiefly an academic concept, can be shaped by contractual solutions to debt

restructuring to offer a more practical approach to stabilizing the sovereign debt markets. The

doctrine of odious debt usefully shifts the focus of debt restructuring mechanisms to creditor

motivations and behaviour. The paper revisits traditional notions of odious debt – debts incurred

against the interests of the citizens of a state, without their consent and with the awareness of the

creditor – focusing on the doctrine’s flexibility with regard to the expansion of the grounds for

odiousness. It considers applying loan sanctions to an expansive interpretation of the odious

debt doctrine and suggests that in the current climate of sovereign debt distress in the eurozone,

as well as political upheaval in North Africa and the Middle East, loan sanctions offer the

potential to reshape the sovereign debt capital markets in a way that promotes sustainable

development.

                                                                                                                         4 The term “odious debt” originally identified debt that a government contracted with a view to attaining objectives that were prejudicial to the interests of its local population or to successor governments.

 

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Standing alongside the literature on odious debts is scholarship that formulates optimal regimes

for restructuring sovereign debt. The relationship between these two areas is under-theorized.

While some proposals call for a global sovereign bankruptcy regime, others prefer the status quo

whereby sovereigns experiencing financial distress attempt to negotiate the paring back of debt

obligations on an ad hoc basis. The relationship between the calls for a vibrant doctrine of

odious debt and a framework for restructuring sovereign debt has not been fully settled. This

paper enters the fray, proposing a combination of contractual solutions and loan sanctions as

imperfect but effective substitutes for the lack of a global sovereign debt restructuring regime.

 

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2. SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT

Restructuring sovereign debt is costly. It is also ineffective at preserving the value of private

creditors’ investment and at reducing the indebtedness owed by sovereigns to their private

creditors.5 Worse, debts owed by low-income countries (particularly in sub-Saharan Africa) to

private creditors are the most time-consuming to restructure and the most costly for private

creditors in terms of the “haircut” (a percentage discount in the face value of the bonds) they

must take.6 Combined with the fact that low-income states also receive little debt relief from

private creditors, the average defaulting state emerges from a restructuring with a ratio of debt

(owed to creditors)-to-gross domestic product (GDP) that is as high or higher than before a

default.7 What explains these patterns, and is it inevitable that they persist? If they do, it is

incumbent upon sovereign debt and development scholars to help design effective approaches to

debt-restructuring for domestic policy makers that can implement more desirable outcomes in the

future.

Much of the literature on patterns in debt restructuring focuses on the difficulties faced by

creditors in coordinating to make mutually beneficial agreements with the debtor. Debt is often

owed to a large number of private sector creditors. In the case of traditional loans, syndicated

loans are often negotiated with dozens of banks; with sovereign bonds, bondholders often

number in the thousands, are constantly shifting, and cover many jurisdictions.8 Restructuring

negotiations with uncoordinated creditors presents two significant collective action problems: (i)

classic “free rider” issues, where bondholders refrain from offering debt relief; and (ii) holdouts

                                                                                                                         5 Mark L. J. Wright, “Restructuring Sovereign Debts with Private Sector Creditors: Theory and Practice” in Braga, “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 at 296.

6 Ibid at 295. Private creditor haircuts average more than 50 percent for loans to low-income countries, compared with less than 30 percent upper-middle-income states.

7 Ibid at 296.

8 Ibid at 306.

 

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by litigious, predatory creditors. This paper revisits both problems throughout its analysis of

contractual, bankruptcy and ex ante theoretic approaches to sovereign debt restructuring.

By the late nineteenth century, a time when bankruptcy generally meant liquidation and

liquidation often meant the recovery of only a small portion of what was owed, many bond

market participants had come to support the need for bondholder cooperation in a distressed

situation.9 In identifying the problem as one of facilitating a coordinated debt workout

(restructuring) for the benefit of all creditors, three solutions emerged: (1) contractual provisions

in bond documentation that permit a majority or supermajority of bondholders to direct the

course of negotiated debt work-out; (2) bankruptcy laws designed to shield debtors from hostile

legal action during debt restructuring; and (3) the use of the equitable powers of civil courts to

supervise negotiated debt restructuring while protecting borrowers and majority creditors from

exploitation by dissident minorities.10 At various times during the late nineteenth and early

twentieth centuries, all three solutions were tried.

From the late 1870s, English law-governed contracts began including “majority action clauses”

in bonds and their trust deeds, which allowed a supermajority of bondholders to agree to reduce

the amount due or to defer a payment date under a bond. US corporations did not follow this

practice, relying instead on courts to exercise their equitable powers to appoint a receiver while

the corporations’ creditors negotiated a debt workout. That is, until 1934 when the US Congress

enacted legislation that facilitated corporate reorganizations for industrial companies and which

became the current Chapter 11.11 After the recent financial crisis, the global financial

community is confronted with a remarkably similar problem. Sovereign issuers are today in a

comparable position to twentieth-century corporate bond issuers. Sovereign bankruptcy

proceedings are not possible for sovereign issuers today, just as they were not for most corporate

issuers in the early part of the last century.

                                                                                                                         9 Lee C. Buchheit, G. Mitu Gulati & Ashoka Mody, “Sovereign Bonds and the Collective Will” (2002) 51 Emory L J 1317 [Buchheit, “Sovereign Bonds”] at 1321.

10 Ibid.

11 Ibid at 1333. See United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 1101-1146 (1978).

 

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From the late 1970s to the mid-1980s, the perceived inefficiencies that motivated proposals for

institutional and legal improvements in sovereign debt restructuring were inefficient debt

workouts caused by incentive problems on the creditor side. For the early contributors, the main

problem was a coordination failure between the public and private sectors. Whereas economic

literature was most concerned with the possibility of any decrease in the provision of financing

and free riding problems that impede debt work-outs, the legal literature (as represented by the

IMF Legal Department) was more concerned with a potential landslide of court actions as a

significant threat to orderly negotiations.12 After the 1994 Mexican peso crisis and Mexico’s

rescue package of loans and guarantees, valued at more than USD 40 billion, provided by

international financial institutions and G-7 governments, sovereign debt literature focused

mainly on debt panics and the attendant moral hazards.

Today, virtually all proposals for orderly debt workouts focus on an agreed need to avoid the

moral hazard attributed to debt crisis lending.13 The inefficiency of collective action problems

still being the primary consideration, the literature focuses on proposals to change creditor

incentives. Proposals include changes to international law to create rules or institutions under

which supermajority agreements could be imposed on hold-out creditors, new financing would

be given priority and in some proposals, the sovereign would be shielded from litigation during

the negotiation process.

Protracted and inefficient debt workout negotiations could, however, be as much a result of

debtor actions as those of creditors. Most scholars recognize that debtor incentives can become

an issue as a by-product of measures put into place to address collective action problems. Stays

of litigation or protection from holdout creditors imply a reduction in market discipline –

protections that could come to be abused by sovereign debtors. Some have suggested that such

concerns could be addressed through an international convention imposing rules on sovereign

debtors, but this applies only to statutory proposals for debt workouts. All that is required to

                                                                                                                         12 Kenneth Rogoff & Jeromin Zettelmeyer, “Bankruptcy Procedures for Sovereigns: A History of Ideas, 1976-2001” (2002) IMF Working Paper WP/02/133 [Rogoff, “Bankruptcy Procedures”] at 28.

13 Ibid.

 

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create incentives for debtors not to abuse such protections is the presence of an initial

inefficiency that threatens to impose costs on the debtor. This can be accomplished by the threat

of reverting to the status quo ante in the event that the debtor does not negotiate in good faith.14

A potential problem of debt workout procedures is the creation of a debtor moral hazard: the

undermining of debtor incentives ex ante to avoid defaulting on their debt. Debtor moral hazard

is often reduced to a sidebar issue given the reputational costs of defaulting (discussed below)

are so high so as to impose sufficient disincentives. Further, it is argued that even if the moral

hazard results in higher borrowing costs and reduced capital flows, this might nevertheless be

efficient: it may be more efficient to have more frequent, low-cost debt restructuring than

infrequent but substantial debt crises.15 While such efficiency might also be welfare-improving,

in that countries would avoid the financial disruption of massive crises, the problem remains that

sovereign lenders do not have the benefit of sovereign collateral or judicial contract enforcement

as they do at the domestic level. The high costs of a sovereign debt default are arguably the

market’s response to the borrower’s lack of collateral and judicially enforceable contracts.

2.1 The Financial Crisis

Most developing countries have shown remarkable resilience in the wake of the financial crisis.

The financing needs in emerging and low-income economies are projected to decline through

2012 due to lower pre-crisis debt levels, lower deficits and a lengthening of maturities.

However, the present value of public debt-to-GDP ratios for low-income countries has

deteriorated by five to seven percentage points compared with pre-financial crisis projections.16

A recent study undertaken by the World Bank and the IMF suggests potential adverse effects of

the crisis on countries’ debt burden indicators as a function of the depth and length of the crisis

                                                                                                                         14 Ibid at 30-1.

15 Ibid at 31.

16 Braga “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 at 2.

 

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and the terms at which a country can obtain financing.17 Emerging and developing countries

experienced significant capital outflows as financial institutions have withdrawn liquid

investments to shore up their flagging balance sheets. As such, low-income countries,

particularly heavily indebted poor countries (HIPC), face important debt management

challenges. Policymakers in those countries confront unique problems relating to how they can

borrow in a disciplined way to militate against the need to structure their debt. The impact of the

current eurozone sovereign debt crisis on capital flows to developing countries raises a worrying

question: whether the 2008 financial crisis was a harbinger of a new generation of sovereign debt

crises in both developed and the developing countries.

The sovereign financing needs in developed countries, let alone the current European sovereign

debt crisis, begs the question of how states’ burgeoning sovereign debt will, given the current

financial climate, be repaid. Borrowing connotes a legal obligation to repay. A baseline

assumption for the effective operation of debt capital markets is that debts will be honoured

according to their terms, unless there is a good reason why they cannot or should not be

honoured. Where this assumption erodes, market forces inevitably administer an appropriate

penalty to debtors that fail to borrow responsibly: faced with loan defaults or bond restructuring

and an increasing dissatisfaction among creditors, profligate sovereign borrowers will eventually

pay a price in terms of reduced market access, higher interest rates and tighter financial

covenants.18

However, given the time that such market-directed retributive justice can take to operate, it may

not be sufficient to promote short-term prudence on the part of sovereign borrower or their

creditors. One problem with fashioning a remedy for many types of irresponsible behaviour in

this area is that a conventional legal remedy is destined to be insufficient. Notwithstanding the

                                                                                                                         17 Leonardo Hernández & Boris Gamarra, “Debt Sustainability and Debt Distress in the Wake of the Ongoing Financial Crisis: The Case of IDA-Only African Countries” in Braga, “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 at 129.

18 Ibid.

 

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development of the restrictive theory of sovereign immunity,19 norms of sovereign lending are

largely extra-legal:20 “[b]reach those norms and the sanction will be imposed by investors, debt

traders and diplomats – not judges.”21 As such, principles of responsible sovereign borrowing

must influence how these creditors are treated when debt is restructured according to the free-

market, contractual approach.

2.2 Developing and Developed Market Convergence

Over the last decade, a growing number of emerging market and low-income countries entered

the international capital markets for the first time, including Bahrain, Bulgaria, Czech Republic,

Egypt, Gabon, Georgia, Ghana, Hungary, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Poland, Sri Lanka, Vietnam,

and Ukraine.22 The proceeds of debut sovereign bond issues are used for a multiplicity of

purposes, from infrastructure project finance (Bahrain and Sri Lanka), to relieving budgetary

pressures (Ecuador and Egypt), to repaying existing debt (Indonesia, Poland, and Ukraine) or

                                                                                                                         19 Prior to 1970 sovereign states were accorded absolute immunity. However, in the 1970s, a theory of restrictive immunity developed in the UK following the 1952 “Tate letter” doctrine in the US. The crux of restrictive immunity theory is that where a state is engaged in commercial or private acts, it loses the right to immunity and is subject to process in the jurisdiction in which it carries on such acts. The theory is referred to in judgments of the Supreme Court of Canada in Congo (Republic) v. Venne, [1971] S.C.R. 997, 22 D.L.R. (3d) 669 (S.C.C.) by both Ritchie J. for the majority and Laskin J. (as he then was) in dissent and acknowledged in lower courts in Canada. There is little doubt that this rule is generally accepted on the international level, but the law with respect to exceptions to sovereign immunity in Canada is not clear. In the UK, there is a general proposition that the English courts have no jurisdiction over states unless one of the exceptions to immunity set out in sections 2 to 11 of the State Immunity Act 1978, c. 33 applies (section 1(1)).

20 Mitu Gulati & Lee C. Buchheit, "Responsible Sovereign Lending and Borrowing", Paper prepared for the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development Project on Promoting Responsible Sovereign Lending and Borrowing (2010), online: UNCTAD <http://www.unctad.org/en/docs/osgdp20102_en.pdf> [Gulati, “Responsible Sovereign Lending”] at 17. 21 Ibid.

22 Udaibir S. Das, Michael G. Papaioannou & Magdalena Polan, “Strategic Considerations for First-Time Sovereign Bond Issuers” (2010) IMF Working Paper WP/08/261 at 3, online: International Monetary Fund <http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2008/wp08261.pdf>.

 

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Paris Club23 debt (Gabon).24 Prior to the financial crisis, debut issuers were gaining access to the

international capital markets with increasing issue amounts and relatively lower interest rates,

thanks to generally strong macroeconomic conditions, international financial liquidity and strong

investor appetite for higher risk investments and new asset classes.25

As domestic debt issuances rose, so did innovations in risk management. In developing

countries, credit derivatives contracts to transfer credit risk among market participants grew from

zero in the mid-1990s to USD 39 billion in 2010 (just short of the USD 42 billion high in the

fourth quarter of 2009).26 Though small, relative to advanced economies, derivatives markets in

emerging economies have expanded rapidly: in 33 emerging market economies, the average

daily turnover of derivatives was USD 1.2 trillion in April 2010, an increase of 300 percent since

2001; 25 percent over the past three years, despite the financial crisis.27

It has been predicted that the shift from foreign to domestic borrowing and rise of such new risk

transfer instruments portends a fundamental change for many countries reducing vulnerability to

currency crises, multiplying debt management options for governments, developing domestic

financial markets, and expanding access to credit.28 If there is indeed a positive correlation

                                                                                                                         23 The Paris Club is an informal group of 19 permanent member creditors who provide debt rescheduling, which is debt relief by postponement or, in the case of concessional rescheduling, reduction in debt service obligations during a defined period (flow treatment) or as of a set date (stock treatment).

24 Supra note 22 at 3.

25 Ibid.

26 Bank for International Settlements, Monetary and Economic Department, “BIS Quarterly Review: International banking and financial market developments” (March 2011), online: Bank for International Settlements <http://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt1103.pdf> at 22, Bank for International Settlements, Monetary and Economic Department, “BIS Quarterly Review: International banking and financial market developments” (December 2010), online: Bank for International Settlements <http://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt1012.htm> [BIS, “December 2010”] at 21. Issuance increased in all regions except Latin America and the Caribbean, where it fell by eight percent on the back of sharply lower issuance by non-financial corporations in Mexico.

27 Ibid.

28 Anna Gelpern, “Domestic Bonds, Credit Derivatives, and the Next Transformation of Sovereign Debt” (2008) 83 Chicago-Kent L Rev 147 [Gelpern, “Domestic Bonds”] at 150.

 

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between investor interest and institutional quality, the shift might signal new trust in emerging

market institutions, including legal infrastructure. While there is far from a true convergence

with the deep, liquid markets that developed economies enjoy, the change in developing and

emerging economies is significant, as measured by proxy as growth in local-currency, locally-

held, locally-issued, or local law-governed debt.29

As domestic debt being issued by poor and middle-income countries has grown,30 lawyers and

economists working in the area were concerned with how these bonds, usually denominated in

foreign currency and governed by New York or English law, would be restructured in the event

of a crisis.31 The replacement of bank loans with widely-held bonds as the dominant source of

external sovereign debt finance significantly complicated the process of restructuring a

sovereign’s debt in the event of a debt crisis, given that a diverse investor base holds the debt. It

was expected that, in an economic crisis, sovereign issuers entering the debt markets for the first

time would now face serious collective action problems in attempting to negotiate with a

restructuring of outstanding debt.32 Such a problem calls for solutions that fall into two broad

categories: contractual solutions and statutory analogues to domestic bankruptcy.

                                                                                                                         29 Ibid.

30 According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the outstanding stock of domestic bonds in these countries went from one trillion dollars in 1995 to over four trillion dollars in 2006, with public sector borrowing close to three-quarters of the new total. In Mexico, domestic government debt went from just over 20 percent of total debt stock in 1995 to nearly 80 percent in 2007. See Bank for International Settlements, “Financial stability and local currency bond markets” (2007) Committee on the Global Financial System, online: Bank for International Settlements <http://www.bis.org/publ/cgfs28.pdf>.

31 Gelpern, “Domestic Bonds”, supra note 28 at 148.

32 Ibid.

 

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3. CONTRACTUAL SOLUTIONS

The fear of sovereign defaults that permeates the debt capital markets in the eurozone, along with

the anger over bailouts given to distressed countries, has prompted intense debate over sovereign

debt crisis management. To a large extent, this is a debate about contracts. Sovereign issuers

can theoretically include a host of restructuring-related terms in their bond documentation, an

approach that was originally associated with Professors Barry Eichengreen and Richard Portes

and the G-10 Deputies Working Group.33 Today, eurozone politicians are promoting a particular

subset of such terms as a tool for effective sovereign debt crisis management: collective action

clauses (CACs).34 Inconceivable as it may seem that contractual provisions can avert a global

financial crisis, the idea is not new. CACs were touted as the solution to global financial crisis

after the Mexican and Asian financial crises in the mid-to-late 1990s, and have emerged again in

the aftermath of the global financial crisis. The following discussion evaluates the effectiveness

and the limitations of such terms in facilitating efficient sovereign bond restructuring.

Sovereigns face many of the same problems as other debtors in lending relationships. Where the

sovereign encounters financial difficulties, both the sovereign issuer and its creditors might be

better off agreeing to restructure repayment obligations (thereby promoting financial stability)

than to demand full repayment (and risk receiving nothing upon default).35 However, unlike

other lending relationships, bondholders are a dispersed group of creditors. Whereas most

                                                                                                                         33 See e.g. Barry Eichengreen, “Restructuring Sovereign Debt” (2003) 17:4 Journal Econ Persp 75, and G-10, “Report of the G-10 Working Group on Contractual Clauses” (2002), online: Bank for International Settlements < http://www.bis.org/publ/gten08.pdf>.

34 See Council of the European Union, Press Release, “Statement by the Eurogroup” (28 November 2010), online: Council of the European Union <http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/ecofin/118050.pdf>.

35 See Udaibir S. Das et al, “Managing Public Debt and Its Financial Stability Implications” in Braga, “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 for research on the correlation between debt management techniques and financial stability, viewed as a function of the level of debt stock, debt profile, investor base, development of the capital markets and institutional factors.

 

14

contracts are made between parties who know each other’s identity prior to contracting,

sovereign debt investors rarely know each others’ identities – a blindness that extends to the

secondary markets, where bondholders’ identities are constantly shifting.

The changing identity of a sovereign’s investors is not problematic where the sovereign can meet

its payment obligations. However, where the sovereign cannot service its debt, the actions of

one bondholder can dramatically affect the interests of other bondholders.36 Where a bondholder

has unfettered discretion to accelerate payment on its bonds following an event of default, other

bondholders’ options could be quickly curtailed, leaving the majority to the mercy of the

bondholders who take the first mover’s advantage. Sovereign bonds present clear coordination

problems that prevent bondholders from being in a position to be informed about, participate in,

and agree to a restructuring – even where such restructuring might be mutually beneficial.37

The difficulty with coordinating a bond restructuring where bondholders are geographically

dispersed rests on a particular market practice in the drafting of sovereign bond legal

documentation in New York: the inclusion of bondholder unanimity provisions requiring all

bondholders to agree to any change to a bond’s financial terms.38 In the absence of a sovereign

equivalent to bankruptcy, this would make New York law-governed bonds effectively

restructuring-proof.

                                                                                                                         36 Buchheit, “Sovereign Bonds”, supra note 9 at 1317.

37 See e.g. Jeffrey Sachs, Theoretical Issues in International Borrowing (Princeton: Princeton University Press, Princeton Studies in International Finance, 1984) [“International Borrowing”] at 54. However, the accepted view that unanimity provisions act as a complete bar to restructuring was questioned by the successful debt exchanges in Ecuador, Uruguay and Argentina, suggesting that the coordination problems may be overstated. See Anna Gelpern & Mitu Gulati, “Snake Oil” (2012) 75 Law & Contemp Probs [forthcoming in 2012], online: Duke Law Scholarship Repository <http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/faculty_scholarship/2362> [Gelpern, “Sovereign Snake Oil”]. 38 See Anna Gelpern & Mitu Gulati, “Innovation after the revolution: foreign sovereign bond contracts since 2003” (2009) 4 Cap Mrkts L J 85. See also Buchheit, “Sovereign Bonds”, supra note 9 at 1324-25.

 

15

3.1 Contract Modification

In their work on contract modification, Michael Penny and Professors Varouj Aivazian and

Michael Trebilcock present an analytical paradox in the law of contract modification: on the one

hand, modifications should be presumptively invalid because they may encourage opportunistic

behaviour; and, on the other hand, they should be presumptively valid because they represent the

parties’ assessment of their own best interests. To analyze this contradiction from an economic

framework, the authors distinguish between two alternative cases in which contract

modifications might be sought: (1) cases where there is no change in the underlying economic

conditions governing the contract, except that the promisee acquires a power over the promisor

and, ex post, uses that power to extract higher returns; and (2) cases where changes in the

underlying economic conditions prevent the promisee from its promised performance without a

modification of the contract. They find that in pure strategic modification cases the static

efficiency gains to the contracting parties from modification (relative to default) are outweighed

by the long-run or dynamic efficiency losses from encouraging opportunistic behaviour:

Only in cases where the efficient allocation of risks is indeterminate…or where the risk in question is extremely remote so that the expected costs of bearing it do not induce significant efficient precautionary responses, is it likely that the static efficiency gains from recontracting will outweigh the dynamic efficiency losses from permitting the reallocation of risks through modifications exacted and acceded to in large part because of limitations in the remedial system available to parties on breach.39

Thus, where modifications to the terms and conditions of sovereign bonds are sought due to

supervening changes in the economic environment, debt restructuring can represent mutually

advantageous positive-sum circumstances. The Coase theorem implies that in competitive

markets with no transaction costs, parties to a conflict over property rights will negotiate the

most efficient set of terms.40 Therefore, if re-negotiating the terms of a sovereign bond ex post is

mutually advantageous to the parties, it will lead to an optimal restructuring of the bond terms

                                                                                                                         39 Varouj A. Aivazian, Michael J. Trebilcock & Michael Penny, “The Law of Contract Modifications: The Uncertain Quest for a Bench Mark of Enforceability” (1984) 22 Osgood Hall L J 173 at 191.

40 See R. H. Coase, “The Problem of Social Cost” (1960) 3 J L & Econ 1.

 

16

and conditions.41 This suggests that contract modifications are necessary for the attainment of

Pareto efficiency. However, achieving Pareto efficient allocations depends on whether

contractual modifications are permissible.42 This is not a given in the sovereign bond context

where, even if legally permitted, unanimity provisions can practically prevent modifications ex

post.

Notwithstanding the fact that a sovereign bond’s rating is dependent upon a host of factors and

varies significantly from country to country, the risk of default is generally considered to be

remote at the time of issuance (otherwise, there would be no access to the market). In such

circumstances, modifications of the terms of those bonds may be Pareto efficient in that possible

losses from a default to both the sovereign issuer and the bondholders can be at least partially

avoided and long-run incentives for efficient risk-bearing by future contracting parties may not

be significantly distorted. However, where a default is imminent (such as an economic crisis),

this assumption falls away. Bondholders may hold up the sovereign issuer in such

circumstances, demanding concessions by trading on the fact that the country’s fiscal health

leaves the country with no choice but to restructure its debt.

Commenting on similar strategic cases of modification that give rise to the problem of

opportunism, Aivazian, Trebilcock and Penny hypothesize that “[m]odifications entered into in

these circumstances are not Pareto efficient forms of recontracting, but are at best zero-sum

games.”43 However, in the sovereign bond context, sovereign immunity acts as a constraint on

such behaviour because, after a default, bondholders cannot secure the relief required to put

themselves in the same position as if principal and interest on the bonds had been fully paid.

Debt restructuring can be rendered impracticable where provisions require bondholder unanimity

in order to effect any change to a bond’s terms. This is partly due to the fact that when viewed

from an ex post perspective, unanimity provisions exacerbate the bondholder coordination

                                                                                                                         41 Supra note 39 at 206.

42 Ibid at 191.

43 Ibid at 198.

 

17

problems. However, viewed ex ante, a unanimity requirement is more justifiable in the sense

that it sends a signal to market participants that a default is unlikely. Given the inherent

challenge of accurately assessing the risk profile of a sovereign’s debt, the market might value

that signal and agree to lend on more favourable terms.44

In any case, potential opportunistic bondholders have two options: a renegotiated payment of the

remaining interest and principal or a default. Performance of the contract in the sovereign bond

context is clearly preferable to a complete default. Drawing an analogy from the conclusion

offered by Aivazian, Trebilcock and Penny (in the context of laws that do or do not permit

contractual modification), the optimal circumstance in bond structuring are contractual terms that

promote efficiency by eliminating incentives that lead to socially wasteful gaming behaviour and

related transaction costs.45

Absent statutory bankruptcy, a sovereign constrained by unanimity provisions might simply

refrain from launching a debt restructuring. In addition to the coordination difficulty,

bondholders can leverage unanimity to extract side payments. That is, certain bondholders may

refuse to consent to a restructuring and later demand a side payment from those bondholders who

negotiated and wish to proceed with the restructuring. Holdout bondholders might also refuse to

participate in negotiations where, for example, there is the possibility of a taxpayer bailout.

CACs are intended to solve these problems by facilitating the coordination of a dispersed group

of creditors.

3.2 Collective Action Clauses

CACs can be classified into four broad categories: modification clauses; creditor committee

clauses; trustee clauses; and non-acceleration provisions. Modification clauses bind all

                                                                                                                         44 W. Mark C. Weidermaier & Mitu Gulati, “How Markets Work: The Lawyer’s Version” (2011) 1886435 UNC Legal Studies Research Paper at 10, online: Social Science Research Network <http://ssrn.com/abstract=1886435>, citing F. Weinschelbaum & J. Wynne, “Renegotiation, collective action clauses and sovereign debt markets” (2005) 67 J Int’l Econ 47.

45 Supra note 39 at 198.

 

18

bondholders to changes in the terms and conditions of their bonds that are approved by a certain

percentage of bondholders. Creditor committee clauses re-introduce the 19th and early 20th

century practice of permitting major capital exporting countries to establish committees to

negotiate with sovereign issuers on behalf of dispersed bondholders. Depending on the

particular iteration of such a clause, it might permit bondholders to delegate the authority to a

committee to negotiate on their behalf. Trustee clauses commonly address a multiplicity of

administrative tasks that must be performed during the life of a sovereign bond. Generally, a

fiscal agent owes duties to the sovereign issuer, not to the bondholders, although some bond

documentation might empower a trustee to institute litigation against the issuer in response to a

default. Finally, bond documentation used in the last ten years often includes non-acceleration

provisions whereby bondholders are prevented from accelerating payment of principal unless

approved by a specified percentage of bondholders (typically 25 percent). Though applicable to

each type, the following analysis focuses on modification clauses.

3.2.1 New Interest in an Old Idea

As early as the late 19th and early 20th centuries, England was developing majority-voting

provisions.46 Standard form New York law-governed bonds always required bondholder

unanimity and it was not until the mid-1990s that proposals were made to include CACs in such

sovereign bonds. In 2002 the G-10 invited a panel of sovereign debt specialists to draft a model

CAC for use in sovereign bonds,47 but the use of CACs in debt contracts is an endogenous

variable; when they were originally proposed, the question was raised as to how creditors and

debtors could be persuaded to adopt them. While the Republic of Kazakhstan issued New York

law-governed bonds in 1997 that permitted a supermajority of bondholders to amend key terms

                                                                                                                         46 The need for bondholder cooperation arose when railroads and industrial corporations began issuing bonds in large numbers. The combination of widely dispersed bond holdings and costs of restructuring made it inefficient to allow a single creditor to force the liquidation of the debtor. CACs were first introduced into corporate bonds issued in the London market in 1879. In the United States, majority action clauses were never widely utilized, and investors relied instead on the intervention of the courts. For a history of the emergence of CACs in the English market, see Buchheit, “Sovereign Bonds”, supra note 9 at 1324-25. See also Eichengreen, supra note 33 at 84-84. 47 G-10, “Report of the G-10 Working Group on Contractual Clauses” (2002), online: Bank for International Settlements < http://www.bis.org/publ/gten08.pdf>.

 

19

and conditions, it was Mexico that was the first major sovereign issuer since the 1920s to include

a CAC in its landmark 2003 New York law-governed sovereign bond issue. Soon after that

February issue, the majority of the New York sovereign market was including CACs.

Subsequently, debt capital markets participants worldwide began to take notice of and to discuss

the use of CACs in sovereign bond boilerplate.48

In the wake of the eurozone sovereign debt crisis, the finance ministers of major European states

recently released a statement requiring that all euro-area sovereign bonds contain an identical

CAC by 2013 in order to preserve market liquidity and facilitate restructuring, where necessary.

Those CACs are intended to be consistent with those commonly used under UK- and US-law governed

contracts after the G-10 report on CACs, and will include:

aggregation clauses allowing all debt securities issued by a Member State to be considered together in negotiations. This would enable the creditors to pass a qualified majority decision agreeing a legally binding change to the terms of payment (standstill, extension of the maturity, interest-rate cut and/or haircut) in the event that the debtor is unable to pay.49

The CAC prescription does not indicate how the inclusion of market CACs will be

accomplished. It is possible that the EU could promulgate a model text for the clause. There is

certainly precedent for such an approach, as bonds governed by English law or issued in the

European markets generally follow the industry-wide accepted practices (including a CAC

model clause) established by the International Capital Market Association (ICMA), an industry

trade group.50 The eurozone CAC could also be enshrined in EU law or treaty or be legislated at

the domestic level.

                                                                                                                         48 Gelpern, “Sovereign Snake Oil”, supra note 37 at 6.

49 Supra note 34.

50 International Capital Markets Association, “Standard Collective Action Clauses (CACs) for their Terms and Conditions of Sovereign Notes”, online: International Capital Markets Association <http://www.icmagroup.org/ICMAGroup/files/3c/3cc80d90-da99-4562-8ef2-f604a8e5963e.PDF>.

 

20

With regard to the eurozone sovereign bond CAC, there will be a need to ensure that the market

standard CAC is interpreted in a consistent manner, even when lawsuits involving CAC-

interpretation are brought in different jurisdictions. Otherwise, the move toward greater

contractual coordination may be spoiled by ambiguous, and possibly contradictory, interpretation

in courts across the region. As such, the CAC, no matter what the sovereign bond document,

should be governed by and construed in accordance with a single body of laws. In light of the

history of CACs and market practice, the law of England is the obvious choice to be the

governing law of the eurozone CAC. This could be achieved by specifying in the contract that

the CAC shall be governed by the laws of England and Wales, even if the other provisions in the

bond are governed by the laws of another jurisdiction (likely the issuer’s domestic law).

3.2.2 Possibilities and Problems

CACs encourage private sector burden-sharing by introducing into bond documentation majority

voting provisions and collective-representation clauses so that restructuring can take place even

where all bondholders are not in agreement. The approach here is Coasian in spirit. Achieving

efficiency with CACs depends on the costs of forming a qualified majority and renegotiating the

debt. Collective action clauses support efficient renegotiation of sovereign debt contracts,

whereas unanimity requirements give rise to rent-seeking behaviour in a bond restructuring due

to holdouts.51 CACs are often presented as a solution to such socially costly delays in

renegotiations, which arise under unanimity provisions.

In the absence of barriers to negotiation between the bondholders of different series of bond

issues (not an insignificant assumption, given the diversity of bondholders), mutual gains to

creditors from restructuring negotiations imply that CACs are all that is needed to achieve a

constrained efficient equilibrium.52 That is, where bondholders are incentivized to negotiate, an

international bankruptcy regime might be redundant. The recent bond restructuring by the

                                                                                                                         51 Kenneth M. Kletzer, “Sovereign Bond Restructuring: Collective Action Clauses and Official Crisis Intervention” (2003) IMF Working Paper WP/03/134 at 4.

52 Ibid at 21.

 

21

government of Belize is illustrative. After announcing an impending debt rearrangement in

August 2006, the government began intensive consultations with its creditors and endorsed an

exchange offer by December 2006. Because of a CAC in the country’s dollar-denominated, New

York law-governed bonds, the total amount covered by the financial restructuring represented

98.1 percent of eligible claims. Belize was the first sovereign in over 70 years to use a CAC to

amend the terms and conditions of its bonds in a sovereign debt restructuring. Its CAC required

written consent of holders of at least 85 percent of the bonds, and 87.3 percent accepted the

exchange offer. After the exchange offer closed, Belize’s bond ratings were upgraded.53

CACs are straight forward contractual provisions that can be included in bond documentation

relatively easily. CACs’ main advantage as a tool in debt restructuring lies in their ability to

address the problem of holdout creditors by allowing a majority to bind all bondholders. The use

of a contractual approach can discipline creditors by preventing rent-seeking behaviour. CACs

are useful legal solutions in bond documentation (less so for syndicated loans), but fall short of

providing a panacea.

A leading argument against a contractual approach is that CACs raise borrowing costs by

signalling to the market that a sovereign is willing to restructure.54 While the empirical evidence

is mixed on the impact of CACs on bond spreads, some studies show that there are no price

differentials between bonds with the provisions and bonds without them.55 Those findings are

supported by Mexico’s adoption of a CAC in 2003, where that country paid no price penalty.56

There are other, however, debt restructuring issues that CACs cannot address.

                                                                                                                         53 Yuefen Li, Rodrigo Olivares-Caminal & Ugo Panizza, “Avoiding Avoidable Debt Crises: Lessons from Recent Defaults” in Braga, “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 at 251.

54 Gelpern, “Sovereign Snake Oil”, supra note 37 at 7. 55 See e.g. Barry Eichengreen & Ashoka Mody, “Would Collective Action Clauses Raise Borrowing Costs? An Update and Additional Results.” (2000) University of California, Berkeley, Center for International and Development Economics Research (CIDER) Working Paper C00/114.

56 Gelpern, “Sovereign Snake Oil”, supra note 37 at 7.

 

22

While mutual gains to creditors from restructuring negotiations might imply that CACs can

achieve a constrained efficient equilibrium, the contractual approach does not address any

difficulties for coordination of creditor rights across creditor country borders. A traditional CAC

dictates the actions of only those holders of bonds governed by the particular documentation in

question. This is problematic because a sovereign debt restructuring will likely involve multiple

issuances and multiple tranches of bonds, with bondholders in a myriad of jurisdictions. Thus,

CACs make it difficult to achieve inter-creditor equity.57 Proposals for a global sovereign

bankruptcy regime, discussed in section 4, are designed to fill this gap by providing an

international analogue to national bankruptcy proceedings. Still, there is an alternative solution

within the contractual approach: the use of a master bond issuance document, such as a fiscal

agency agreement, under which multiple series of bonds can be issued pursuant to the same

standard conditions. 58 This is market practice in Europe with the use of medium term note

programs for the issuance of bonds.

Often, a key feature of bankruptcy proceedings is that not every creditor needs to agree to the

negotiated deal in order to be bound by it, rendering single creditors powerless to hold up a deal

in an attempt to get better treatment. The need for such a provision was reinforced by the highly

publicized US case of Elliott Associates L.P. v. Banco de la Nacion and Republic of Peru,59

arising out of the Peruvian Brady Plan debt restructuring. Elliott Associates, L.P. (Elliott), an

investment fund specializing in high-risk securities, owned nearly USD 20.7 million of loans for

about USD 11.5 million, and Peru’s debt restructuring proceeded with Elliott holding out. After

a negotiated workout was agreed with Peru’s other creditors, Elliott sued in New York for full

payment of principal and accrued interest. They successfully obtained orders blocking Peru’s

                                                                                                                         57 Christoph G. Paulus, “A Standing Arbitral Tribunal as a Procedural Solution for Sovereign Debt Restructurings” in Braga, “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 at 318.

58 Argentina, for example, had 152 bond issues outstanding at the time of its restructuring in 2005. See Lee C. Buchheit & Mitu Gulati, “Drafting a Model Collective Action Clause for Eurozone Sovereign Bonds” (2011) 6 Cap Markets LJ 317 at 322.

59 194 F.3d 363 (2d Cir. 1999).

 

23

international transfers via Euroclear for payment to bondholders under the debt restructuring.60

The court permitted this approach, concluding a pari passu clause in the agreement regulating

the repayment of Peruvian foreign debt meant all creditors were to share pro rata in any

repayment. Funds that were supposed to pay interest on the newly rescheduled debt were frozen,

with the result that Peru settled with Elliott to avoid defaulting on its bonds. The result was that

a pari passu clause was interpreted in a manner that awarded a holdout creditor at the expense of

other creditors who had reached a negotiated settlement.61 The case clearly strengthens the

position of holdout creditors and underscores the potential difficulty in restructuring sovereign

debt solely with CACs.

Since traditional CACs cannot address holdouts where individual bondholders are not obliged to

negotiate restructurings of the debt or to accept new terms of an exchange offer, many have

argued for the creation of sovereign bankruptcy. CACs can partly address the issue by using a

particular formulation that requires a qualified majority of holders of all bonds to agree to a

restructuring, rather than a qualified majority of each bond issue. Still, the effectiveness of

CACs has historically been limited to situations where the sovereign borrowings are relatively

simple. Scholars like Professors Patrick Bolton and David Skeel suggest that it is not accidental

that the sovereigns that use such clauses in debt restructuring tend to be small countries with a

relatively simple debt profile. CACs can work if the sovereign has issued only a few different

bonds, but the bond-by-bond restructuring strategy is less effective where the issuer has

numerous different outstanding bonds, with different maturities and payout terms, as do all

developed states.

From a legal perspective, the most obvious difficulty is that the contractual approach fails to

present an enforceable priority regime. Similarly, CACs do not necessarily address the need for

                                                                                                                         60 Holger Schier, Towards a Reorganisation System for Sovereign Debt: An International Law Perspective (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2007) at 202.

61 The settlement, worth USD 55.7 million, was five times the amount that Elliott had paid for the debt less than five years earlier. See G. Mitu Gulati & Kenneth N. Klee, “Sovereign Piracy” (2001) 56 The Business Lawyer 635 at 650.

 

24

a standstill while a sovereign is renegotiating its outstanding payment obligations with

bondholders.62 If bondholders are unable to create a priority structure, market inefficiencies (like

bond dilution) will follow.

Most worryingly, CACs might actually leave sovereigns with too much debt.63 Bondholders

balance the benefits of a debt reduction against the costs of a reduction in expected debt

repayments. Thus, creditor-friendly debt restructuring could result in inefficiently low debt

forgiveness. Arguably, this is where statutory bankruptcy approaches to debt restructuring

(discussed in section 4) gain credence, as they can be more debtor-friendly where this kind of

inefficiency is a concern.

3.2.3 Greece’s Sovereign Debt

Prior to 2004, Greek bonds issued under English law contained CACs that permitted

modification of bond payment terms with the agreement of bondholders representing at least 66

percent of the bonds. Individual bondholders were also permitted to accelerate their bonds

following an event of default. After 2004, Greece altered this clause in its English law-governed

bonds to permit amendments to payment terms with the consent of holders of at least 75 percent

of an issue. Bonds issued after that time required that bondholders representing 25 percent of the

bonds vote in favour of acceleration.64 Although almost 90 percent of Greece’s sovereign bonds

are governed by Greek law, the EUR 25 billion debt issued under the law of another jurisdiction

(mostly under English law) do contain some type of CAC. 65

                                                                                                                         62 Patrick Bolton & David A. Skeel, Jr., “How to Rethink Sovereign Bankruptcy: A New Role for the IMF?” in Barry Herman, José Antonio Ocampo & Shari Spiegel, eds, Overcoming Developing Country Debt Crises (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010) [Bolton, “Sovereign Bankruptcy”] at 458.

63 Ibid at 774.

64 Lee C. Buchheit & G. Mitu Gulati, “Restructuring a Nation’s Debt” (2010) 46 Int’l Fin Rev [Buchheit, “Restructuring”] at 2.

65 Ibid.

 

25

The euro area recently announced its second rescue plan for the country, agreeing to cover

Greece’s funding gap until 2014 with IMF and private sector involvement. European leaders’

approach to Greece’s financial crisis exemplifies EU chief architect Jean Monnet’s wise

assessment that “people only accept change when they are faced with necessity, and only

recognize necessity when a crisis is upon them.”66 As Greece restructures its outstanding bonds,

this portion of its debt can rely on the CACs to minimize the number of non-participating

creditors so that the requisite supermajority of bondholders of a particular debt issue can cause

all bondholders to tender to an exchange or a revised payment schedule.67

There was generally unfavourable market reaction to the announcement of the rescue plan, some

emerging market and other non-European countries expressing concern that in the package for

Greece private bondholders are being asked to take too small of a write-down. The move to

create an orderly process for eurozone sovereign defaults are already threatening the peripheral

bond markets: Greek, Irish and Portuguese yields have moved sharply higher and reduced

volumes are being traded. 68 The reforms, which will force private investors to share the burden

of defaults, also prompted Standard & Poor’s to cut long-term credit ratings of Greece and

Portugal, making Greece the lowest-rated sovereign in the world.69 It is argued that CACs

already affect investment decisions. If all eurozone government bonds from July 2013 will be

required to include CACs outlining a framework for default and giving a majority of creditors

the authority to trigger a restructuring, peripheral bonds will become even less appealing to

investors by focusing their minds more intently on defaults. Market indications suggest that fund

managers are not buying existing peripheral bonds, under the assumption that they could suffer

similar haircuts to those bonds issued after 2013. A possible reason why the market has reacted

                                                                                                                         66 Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell, “The financial crisis – looking back and the way forward”, (speech delivered at the European Economic and Social Committee and European Trade Union Confederation conference “Rien ne va plus? Ways to rebuild the European Social Market Economy” 22 January 2009), online: European Central Bank <http://www.ecb.int/press/key/date/2009/html/sp090122.en.html>.

67 Buchheit, “Restructuring”, supra note 64 at 9.

68 David Oakley, “Bond dealers skeptical about eurozone plans”, The Financial Times, Capital Markets (29 March 2011), online: The Financial Times <http://www.ft.com/home/us>. 69 David Oakley, “Greek rating now worst in the world”, The Financial Times, Capital Markets (13 June 2011), online: The Financial Times <http://www.ft.com/home/us>.

 

26

negatively to the requirement that eurozone bonds contain CACs by 2013 is that it dispenses

with the pledge by policymakers that defaults would be avoided at all costs.

3.2.4 A Partial Solution

Although only rough in outline, the CAC consensus being ushered in by the recent eurozone

pronouncement might create the contractual regime that many legal scholars have been calling

for. If the vision of the more enthusiastic of their ranks were accurate, there would be no need

for significant additional reforms. As set out above, however, there are sufficient reasons to

suspect that the virtues of CACs were oversold. CACs have worked well in emerging markets

and so offer hope for developing states that share some of the same hurdles in accessing the

markets. CACs are now common in most emerging markets in Latin America, Asia, Central and

Eastern Europe. Mexico, Brazil, Indonesia, South Korea, Poland and the Czech Republic issue

bonds with CACs to reassure investors because they can reduce yields as they offer creditors a

collective force and prevent a small minority of so-called hold-outs blocking a default. Thus,

CACs are an easily-implemented market solution that facilitates restructuring negotiations that

could otherwise, like in Argentina, drag on for years. CACs by themselves will never guarantee

successful debt workouts, even in the face of their inclusion as boilerplate in sovereign debt

documentation. CACs do, however, provide an effective tool in promoting efficient debt

workouts – a tool that should be used in conjunction with other tools that foster collaboration

among debtors and creditors.

 

27

4. SOVEREIGN BANKRUPTCY

Some sovereign debt scholars promote majority voting provisions, believing in the need for

effective debt workouts in the event of financial distress, while others extol the benefits of tough

restrictions on ex post renegotiation and argue that we should maintain the status quo, not in

spite of, but because of the difficulty sovereigns experience in restructuring their debt. Still

others promote a statutory option, whereby sovereign debtors and their creditors are bound by an

international convention that establishes transparent rules for debt restructuring. The motivation

for much of the debate can be traced to the Mexican debt crisis of 1994-95.70 Despite the

successful resolution of the crisis through an IMF bailout, followed by Mexico’s prompt

repayment, the massive emergency assistance raised concerns that bailouts could cause

significant distortions in the sovereign debt capital market. These concerns led to a shift away

from the assumption that the IMF should act as an international lender of last resort (ILLR).

Such concerns over bailouts resurfaced in the wake of the recent financial crisis, when the near-

collapse of the financial intermediation system lead to unprecedented public support operations

like capital injection by treasuries (such as the Troubled Asset Relief Program in the US) and

liquidity support from central banks.

This section addresses proposals to replace the existing, ad hoc approach to sovereign debt

restructuring with a permanent, global regime. Such an ambitious approach has significant

appeal for its ability to strike a balance between negotiated debt reductions (through private

sector involvement) and debt bailouts (through the involvement of multilateral institutions). The

discussion does not attempt to assess the political feasibility of a sovereign bankruptcy

institutional solution, but rather its potential effectiveness in addressing the problems that arise

with a contract-based approach to sovereign debt restructuring.

                                                                                                                         70 Mexico’s sovereign debt crisis followed the government’s devaluation of the peso in December 1994. The devaluation lead to an economic crisis in which the country experienced increased inflation,

 

28

4.1 Status Quo

When a domestic debtor fails to meet its payment obligations under a contract, domestic

bankruptcy law generally serves to resolve the liquidity problem, balancing the interests of the

debtor against those of the creditor. Most advanced countries have such a bankruptcy regime

which, due to its consistent enforcement, creates legal certainty. Legal certainty, in turn, helps

creditors assess the probability of recovery and price risk accurately. All of this tends to lead to

lower borrowing costs.71 However, there is no sovereign analogue to the corporate creditor’s last

resort.

If a sovereign defaults on its loan or bond payments and a lender or bondholder seeks to

accelerate repayment, no formal and compulsory priority regime governs their claims. Instead, a

borrower’s conduct is directed by a handful of tacit conventions driven more by policy issues

than by legal principles. In the loan market, ILLRs are granted priority over other external

creditors, partly because they provide loans when no other lender would, in an attempt to

maximize other creditors’ recovery. While a defaulting debtor would be expected to treat its

external creditors equitably, the lack of authoritative international statute establishing a priority

system among creditors has lead to the Paris Club attempt to address the problem by promoting a

clause of “comparability of treatment”, whereby:

Paris Club creditors do not expect the debtor’s agreements with its other creditors to exactly match the terms of the Paris Club’s own agreement. Instead, given the diversity of creditors, they require that the debtor seek terms “comparable” with the Paris Club’s agreement. They also require the debtor to share with them the results of its negotiations with other creditors.72

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       recession and a peso whose value was cut in half. The Mexican bailout was effected by way of more than USD 40 billion in loans and guarantees, provided by the IMF, the BIS, the US and the Bank of Canada.

71 Lex Rieffel, Restructuring Sovereign Debt: The Case for Ad hoc Machinery (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2003) at 16.

72 Paris Club, “Annual Report 2008” (2008) at 23, online: Club de Paris <http://www.clubdeparis.org/sections/communication/rapport-annuel-d/annual-report-2008/downloadFile/file/AnnualReport2008.pdf>.

 

29

In the context of a debt restructuring, a defaulting borrower has discretion to discriminate

between its unsecured lenders. Yet, creditors facing a defaulting sovereign can be reluctant to

attempt recovery through litigation due to the presence of multilateral financial institutions like

the IMF, which could provide bailout packages to distressed debtors and, more importantly,

because engaging sovereigns in litigation, let alone seizing their assets, is highly problematic.

Even the acceptance of a restrictive approach to sovereign immunity in treaty law as well as in

several national statutes has not induced creditors to favour court proceedings over negotiating

work-outs. The enforcement of sovereign debt obligations is not governed by definite legal

rules.

Sachs’s influential 1984 Princeton study, “Theoretical Issues in International Borrowing” helps

elucidate some of the inefficiencies that justify a centralized resolution to sovereign debt crises.

Sachs presents some of the collective action problems associated with international debt

including free rider problems, suggesting “even in bank syndicates significant free rider

problems remain.”73 The 1985 US Court of Appeals case Allied Bank International v. Banco

Credito Agricola de Cartago74 is a clear example of how a single creditor might hold out. In that

case, a restructuring agreement was reached with all but one of the members of its syndicate of

39 financial institutions after the government of Costa Rica suspended payments on its debt. The

holding that the attempt to repudiate private, commercial obligations is inconsistent with the

orderly resolution of international debt problems makes clear that, in the US, Chapter 11-style

protections did not apply to sovereigns. Sachs observed that:

Individually, these creditors have an incentive to call in their claims against the overextended debtor countries, even if doing so injures the economic performance of the debtor so much that the creditors suffer collectively. Preventing such a destructive race to liquidate assets is one of the major purposes of a bankruptcy code, which restricts the ability of individual creditors to act against the group interest. Unfortunately, countries cannot file for Chapter 11 protection.75

                                                                                                                         73 Sachs, “International Borrowing”, supra note 37 at 33.

74 757 F.2d 516 (2d Cir. 1985).

75 Jeffrey Sachs, “Managing the LDC Debt Crisis” (1986) 2 Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 397 at 418.

 

30

Given the uncertainty of the status quo, there is significant interest in centralized solutions to

sovereign debt crises. After nearly two decades of opposition to sovereign bankruptcy proposals,

the IMF suddenly adopted a sovereign bankruptcy approach in 2001, advocating framework

based in many respects on Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code. The overhauled policy

envisioned a single forum where debt reduction and the amount of emergency lending would be

decided simultaneously.76 A sovereign insolvency framework was hardly a new idea but the

strategy (the Sovereign Debt Restructuring Mechanism (SDRM)) facilitated significant debate

once the IMF was on board. There were strong reservations from creditors, including the US

Treasury, academics and non-governmental organizations, stemming partly from the fact that the

proposal was shaped by the IMF’s institutional self-interest in protecting its role in international

finance.77 The proposal was shelved at the G-1078 meetings in April 2003, despite many

unresolved questions regarding the role of the IMF in an SDRM regime.

4.2 Domestic Bankruptcy: Collective Action, Standstills and Interim Financing

Arguably, the most important ex post function of bankruptcy is to solve creditors’ coordination

problems; ex ante, the benefit of a bankruptcy is in its ability to protect creditors’ priorities. The

possibility of a bankruptcy can profoundly affect the conduct of a corporate debt workout long

before bankruptcy proceedings are commenced. There is widespread interest in sovereign

bankruptcy given that financially distressed states face many of the same problems as do

                                                                                                                         76 Bolton, “Sovereign Bankruptcy”, supra note 62 at 180.

77 Kunibert Raffer, Debt Management for Development: Protection of the Poor and the Millennium Development Goals (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited, 2010) at 39.

78 G-10 refers to the group of countries that have agreed to participate in the IMF borrowing arrangement, General Arrangements to Borrow (GAB), which was established in 1962 when the governments of eight IMF members (Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the UK, and the US, along with the central banks of Germany and Sweden), agreed to make resources available to the IMF for drawings by both participants and nonparticipants. The BIS, European Commission, IMF and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development are all official observers of the activities of the G10.

 

31

personal and corporate debtors, including creditor coordination.79 Thus, literature on sovereign

bankruptcy proposals rests in large part on reasoning by analogy to domestic bankruptcy.80

The concept of a bankrupt corporate debtor in need of working capital is well understood in

domestic bankruptcy law; just because one is bankrupt does not mean one does not need funding.

The sovereign debt markets offer an attractive analogue to the domestic realm, particularly where

a sovereign is suffering from a debt overhang liquidity crisis, the likes of which both developed

and emerging economies are experiencing sovereign debt distress.81 Among other scholars,

Jeffrey Sachs argues that this type of financial crisis is an ideal circumstance for an ILLR, but

that the role of the ILLR is not necessary per se.82 Rather, domestic bankruptcy law shows that

an ILLR would be a sufficient but unnecessary solution. What is needed is a legal regime.

Applied to the sovereign context, this commends a system of bankruptcy for states that are

financially insolvent but still need working capital. However, if the international financial

architecture is to be reformed according to domestic notions of bankruptcy, such a regime must

at least address the problems that the contractual approach fails to solve: providing an

enforceable and predictable system for the reorganization of outstanding bonds while also

addressing the problem of investor moral hazard.

                                                                                                                         79 Patrick Bolton & David A. Skeel, Jr., “Inside the Black Box: How Should a Sovereign Bankruptcy Framework be Structured?” (2004) 53 Emory L J 763 [Bolton, “Black Box”] at 763. 80 Ibid. See also Rogoff, “Bankruptcy Procedures”, supra note 12 at 28. See also Jeffrey D. Sachs, “The International Lender of Last Resort: What are the Alternatives?” (Address delivered at the Harvard Center for International Development and Galen L. Stone Professor of International Trade at Harvard University (June 1999), online: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston <http://www.bos.frb.org/economic/conf/conf43/181p.pdf>.

81 A state suffers from debt overhang when its debt is so large that any earnings generated by new investment projects are entirely appropriated by existing debt holders, so that even projects with a positive net present value cannot reduce the stock of debt. The term originated in corporate finance literature. See e.g. Stewart C. Myers, "Determinants of Corporate Borrowing" (1977) 5 J of Fin Econ 147.

82 Jeffrey D. Sachs, “The International Lender of Last Resort: What are the Alternatives?” (Address delivered at the Harvard Center for International Development and Galen L. Stone Professor of International Trade at Harvard University (June 1999), online: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston <http://www.bos.frb.org/economic/conf/conf43/181p.pdf>.

 

32

Bankruptcy enables creditors, who may be numerous and widely scattered (as are sovereign

bondholders) to collectively respond to a debtor’s financial distress. To prevent debtors from

avoiding collective action and engaging in strategic litigation against the debtor, bankruptcy laws

generally provide for a stay on debt repayments and on creditors’ collection activities during

bankruptcy proceedings. However, there is no equivalent international regime that can impose

such a standstill, nor is this something that a contractual, CAC-driven, approach to restructuring

can solve. In fact, even if it were practically possible, drawing an analogy from domestic

standstill is problematic, given an important difference between domestic corporate debt and

sovereign debt: the latter is very difficult to enforce.

Only in the past 50 years have sovereigns borrowing outside of their own territory become

answerable in foreign courts for the performance of the debt contracts.83 Since the 1970s, it has

been possible to bring an action against a sovereign, but attachment of a sovereign’s assets

remains problematic.84 While creditors might be in a position to obtain foreign court judgments

against their defaulting sovereign debtors, those judgments are essentially unenforceable for the

very reason that the defendants are sovereign. Absent sovereign bankruptcy, the law of

sovereign debt relates mostly to what the international community expects sovereigns to do by

way of honouring their financial commitments, and only marginally about the rules that national

courts apply when a sovereign debtor is sued under a commercial debt instrument.85

A traditional debt contract is worth more than the paper it is printed on because of the framework

of laws and institutions that underpin its enforcement. But sovereign debt is different because

there is no such institutional support that ensures enforcement. So, why do sovereigns repay the

debt owned by private foreign creditors? If there is no legal framework that makes defaulting

costly, sovereign borrowers should not be incentivized to service their outstanding bonds.

Where a debtor has no incentive to repay, this should reduce investor appetite for the riskier

sovereign debt. Faced with financial distress or even a bond restructuring and an increasing

                                                                                                                         83 Gulati, “Responsible Sovereign Lending”, supra note 20 at 1-2.

84 Supra note 5 at 307.

85 Ibid.

 

33

dissatisfaction among creditors, profligate borrowers will eventually pay a price in terms of

reduced market access, higher interest rates and tighter financial covenants. However, the reality

is that lenders continue to extend credit and investors continue to buy sovereign bonds in the face

of the risk.

Where enforcement is difficult, repudiation should be equally difficult.86 However, governments

repay, in part because creditors can interfere with countries’ foreign commerce, refuse to invest

or to extend new loans, and tarnish the sovereign’s reputation.87 The sovereign debt literature

points to two main incentives to repay: the sovereign’s market reputation and sanctions. The

reputation incentive relates mainly to a sovereign’s ability to borrow again in the future, but can

equally extend to a state’s reputation outside of the issuer/investor or borrower/lender

relationship; bond defaults and restructuring can act as a signal to the private sector about the

state of the economy that might affect private sector investment decisions.88

4.3 The Challenge of Implementation

Both the contractual alternative to bailouts and the bankruptcy option address the holdout

problem of sovereign debt restructuring. The statutory option, however, does it more effectively,

in that it applies to all of a sovereign’s debt, and more predictably, in that it would establish a set

of rules applicable to all market participants. Predictability should be more efficient, as debt

markets do not function efficiently when bondholders and lenders are uncertain what will happen

to their claims upon a debt default. Also, by facilitating debt restructuring, a bankruptcy regime

could reduce the potential for the nation to engage in morally hazardous behaviour.

                                                                                                                         86 See Jeremy Bulow & Kenneth Rogoff, “Sovereign Debt: Is to Forgive to Forget?” (1989) 79 Am Econ Rev 43. 87 Anna Gelpern, “Odious, Not Debt” (2007) 70 Law & Contemp Probs 101 [Gelpern, “Odious, Not Debt”] at 110.

88 See Harold L. Cole & Patrick J. Kehoe, “Reviving Reputation Models of International Debt” (1997) 21 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review 21.

 

34

The sovereign bankruptcy approach also promises to address an essential problem of debt

restructuring which CACs cannot address: interim debtor funding. Just as access to interim

financing is a crucial determinant of the outcome of the restructuring process for corporate

debtors,89 it is an important consideration for sovereign debtors experiencing a liquidity crisis.

Debtor-in-possession financing would provide a functional alternative to bailouts, which have

become so controversial lately. The financing could be provided by an international multilateral

institution like the IMF, but such an official creditor would not be necessary. Just as bankruptcy

courts do not make loans to debtors at the domestic level an ILLR could focus on ensuring that

certain future debt issued by the sovereigns would have priority over the pre-bankruptcy debt.

While there does not exist an official mechanism for giving priority to new debt, it is conceivable

that an international regime could make such arrangements.

There are significant flaws in a sovereign bankruptcy approach to debt restructuring. Most relate

to its practicality. Any international regime would have to be activated voluntarily by the debtor

sovereign so as not to offend the principle of sovereignty. Further, it would be difficult to

determine when the regime could be invoked. There would need to be sovereign equivalents to

domestic rules that require insolvency on a cash flow basis (in the same way that individual

bankrupts are given a living allowance out of their wages) in order to file a petition for

bankruptcy. In order to minimize its impact on the capital markets, it would need to be restricted

to circumstances in which sovereigns were restructuring unsustainable debt.

The most vigorous opponents of an SDRM are the bondholders themselves: the international

financial institutions who underwrite sovereign bonds in New York and London.90 The criticism

regarding the impractical nature of a global bankruptcy mechanism is well-founded, but even

more important is the impact that such proposals could have at this time of extreme risk-aversion

in debt markets. Capital flows are uncertain and proposals to create a global legal regime at this

point in time might create increased investor anxiety. Further, there is a serious flaw in the plan

                                                                                                                         89 Empirical evidence suggests that those with access to interim financing are more likely to reorganize than those that lack this access. See David A. Skeel, Jr., “Creditors’ Ball: The “New” New Corporate Governance in Chapter 11” (2003) 152 U Pa L Rev 917 at 936.

90 Bolton, “Black Box”, supra note 79 at 764.

 

35

from the perspective of law and economics, mentioned in “Sovereign Debt Management”,

above. There is a risk that a bankruptcy regime would facilitate sovereign default – the last thing

that is needed in the current state of sovereign distress and market fluctuation. Just as bailouts

create creditor-side moral hazard, sovereign bankruptcy does the same for sovereigns. Given the

proclivity of sovereigns to over-borrow and their immunity from suit, this is no small matter.

Restricting the legal mechanisms whereby sovereigns can restructure encourages sovereigns to

repay what they owe.

Focusing exclusively on ex post considerations, however, a bankruptcy regime like the IMF’s

SDRM cannot effectively respond to debtors’ and creditors’ concerns that sovereign bankruptcy

will result in higher costs of borrowing and a lower volume of debt for emerging-market

countries. What is necessary to address such a defect is an emphasis on ex ante effects of

sovereign debt restructuring. Existing bailout approaches to sovereign debt crises often assures

that bondholders will be made whole. Were a sovereign bankruptcy regime imposed,

bondholders could no longer count on a handout when sovereigns encountered financial distress.

Clearly, there is scope for moderated strategy that balances the status quo against the promotion

of an ambitious and impractical sovereign bankruptcy regime. CACs provide such an

intermediate strategy for addressing sovereign financial distress; their inclusion in all sovereign

debt contracts (a serious possibility, given the recent eurozone pronouncement) would provide a

simpler and less intrusive way to restructure sovereign debt, when necessary.

4.4 Balancing Bailouts and Barriers to Restructuring

The theory that bailout-based policies require ever-larger funds and encourage sovereign debtors

to borrow larger amounts than is otherwise fiscally prudent was, once again, confirmed by the

recent financial crisis. For example, financial support operations after the crisis contributed

strongly to the surge in issuance by OECD governments of both conventional and contingent

liabilities.91 The explosion in the supply of public debt happened at a time when even sovereign

                                                                                                                         91 Hans J. Blommestein, “Public Debt Management and Sovereign Risk during the Worst Financial Crisis on Record: Experiences and Lessons from the OECD Area”, in Braga, “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 at 449-50.

 

36

issuers were experiencing liquidity problems in the secondary markets. Given the increasing

financial commitment that a pure ILLR policy requires and because of the moral hazard it

introduces to the sovereign debt capital markets, it is now widely understood that bailouts need

to be supplemented by at least a partial ‘bail-in’ of the private sector – that is, where

governments compel banks to recapitalize from within using private capital, rather than with

public money.92

The current practice of putting barriers in the way of restructuring has important downsides even

before the prospect of a default arises. Because it is difficult to establish enforceable priorities in

sovereign debt, prospective investors insist on substitutes such as a rapid repayment schedule.

High restructuring costs can have beneficial ex ante effects, but not always in the sovereign debt

context; sovereign debtors are already incentivized to limit restructuring. A better approach

would consider the ex post costs of financial distress, such as the perverse effects of debt

overhang in the event debt cannot be restructured, rather than only ex ante costs.

Section 3 of this paper evaluated the effectiveness of contractual innovations in addressing the

principal legal and economic factors bearing on sovereign debt and debt crises. As discussed,

most legal and economic commentators in this area focus on the collective action problems that

are inherent in a sovereign bond restructuring. However, an equally important problem is the

lack of enforcement of seniority. As a baseline, a sovereign bankruptcy regime should strictly

enforce first-in-time priority. In the absence of enforceable priorities, when a sovereign

experiences financial distress, any new debt comes at the expense of existing creditors. Not only

is there an increased risk of default, but an expanding pool of creditors decreases their pro rata

share of the state’s resources (forcing each creditor to accept a greater haircut) and hinders

creditor coordination when the time comes to restructure.

There is no doubt that the discussion around statutory framework solutions will resume with the

next major debt crisis. The current European sovereign debt crisis has already highlighted just

how susceptible states are to liquidity crises induced through financial panic, and will likely be

                                                                                                                         92 Patrick Bolton & David A. Skeel, Jr., “Redesigning the International Lender of Last Resort” (2005) 6

 

37

used, as have other crises in the past, to reopen the debate on sovereign bankruptcy and the role

to be played by ILLRs. If there was empirical evidence that the greatest proportion of defaults

result from risks over which sovereigns typically have little control – intervening forces such as

global economic crises – a strong case could be made for a single rule so as to economize on

transaction costs involved in sovereigns and debtors negotiating debt workouts. This militates in

favour of a bankruptcy regime.

However, it is difficult to assess the merits of proposed supranational bankruptcy approaches,

particularly in emerging and developing countries, without a clear understanding of the utility of

the contractual provisions that already exist in most sovereign bonds. Whatever the future of

these proposed international bankruptcy regimes, the changes to which they aspire take time and

cannot address the serious problems currently facing the sovereign debt capital markets. With

the recent spate of countries – most prominently Greece, Spain, Portugal and Ireland – teetering

on the brink of financial collapse, the question of how to address sovereign debt default is the

most pressing issue on the global financial agenda. Europe's financial market contagion is

infecting systemically important eurozone members. European policymakers must make greater

strides toward experimenting with what tools we have now, rather than focusing solely on

solutions that could take decades to implement. All of this favours of examining the tools we

already have to promote orderly workouts and applying them in novel ways to contemporary

problems.

Given the time that market-directed retributive justice can take to operate, it may not be

sufficient to promote short-term fiscal prudence on the part of sovereign borrowers or their

creditors. As attractive as a regime of sovereign bankruptcy appears, one problem with

fashioning a solution for a complex debt capital market is that a conventional legal remedy is

destined to be insufficient. Notwithstanding the development of the restrictive theory of

sovereign immunity,93 norms of sovereign lending are largely extra-legal. As such, principles of

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       Chicago J of Int’l L 179 at 179.

93 See note 19.

 

38

responsible sovereign lending and borrowing must influence how these credits are treated in debt

restructuring.

Academics and practitioners who dismiss a full-blown sovereign bankruptcy regime recommend

two main alternatives: either maintaining the status quo, relying on the benefits of restricting ex

post renegotiation or relying on majority voting provisions, as discussed in section 3. The key

benefit of tough restructuring rules stems from their ex ante effect. Where sovereigns know that

they cannot easily renegotiate their debt ex post, they are incentivized to repay the obligations.

The observation that high ex post renegotiation costs can impose discipline on a borrower is well

taken. However, this assumes that sovereigns will choose a level of debt that optimally balances

their ex ante borrowing costs with their ex post costs of financial distress. As discussed, this is

not the reality of sovereign borrowing: instead of choosing a level of debt that optimally balances

borrowing costs, sovereigns are susceptible to committing themselves to excessively high

restructuring costs.

Sovereign debt is time consuming and costly for all parties to restructure, and much research is

dedicated to explaining why this is. Unfortunately, much less work attempts to uncover the

causes of the dramatic rises in indebtedness to private creditors experienced by low-income

countries following a default.94 While it is important to understand why the private sector

experiences loss of value in debt restructuring negotiations, this is only half of the picture.

Understanding how increased indebtedness plagues post-restructuring sovereigns, particularly in

low-income countries, should be a priority for future research.

Incentives are political and politicians are concerned about short-term issues such as how much

they can borrow, rather than long-term ramifications such as the potential consequences of

default, as the current administration will usually be gone by the time any repayment difficulties

arise. Politicians may also borrow in order to further their own goals (for example, in the run-up

to an election), even where there are no gains to the public. Policies aimed at limiting over-

borrowing, one of the main sources of sovereign debt crises, must recognize that borrowing

                                                                                                                         94 Supra note 5 at 296.

 

39

decisions are inherently political decisions. Sovereign debt management is more complicated in

low-income countries than it is in developed countries because the former have a limited ability

to sustain debt but are arguably more in need of funding so as to promote various development

goals.

 

40

5. ODIOUS DEBT & LOAN SANCTIONS

During the 2009 coup d’état ousting Honduran president Manuel Zelaya, the United Nations

General Assembly adopted a resolution denouncing the coup; the US and EU halted some forms

of non-humanitarian aid; and multilateral institutions, including the World Bank and the Inter-

American Development Bank, stopped lending to the state. These events raise a question that is

central to the law and development discourse on sovereign debt forgiveness: should an

undemocratic regime bind the state and its people to its financial commitments? Creditors often

lend to (and institutional investors invest in) states without regard to governmental legitimacy.

This permits undemocratic governments to do with the proceeds what they like and neglect

repayment, thereby saddling their successors with debt.

Addressing claims that sovereign debts are illegitimate after a succession is an important issue

because successions occur with some regularity – a fact the recent ‘Arab spring’ reinforces.

Succession has many faces: it can result in a new international legal personality for a state (East

Timor, Montenegro), in fundamental changes to the government (Burma and, recently, Egypt),

or in foreign-assisted regime change (Afghanistan, Iraq, and possibly Libya). The worlds of

state politics and sovereign debt capital markets intersect when, during successions, debts are

subject to claims of odiousness. This intersection is important because it relates directly to the

well-being of citizens in what are often the poorest countries, and because the sums at stake are

not insubstantial: upon the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, for example, the country

owed USD 67 billion in external debts; and when Saddam Hussein was forcibly removed from

power in Iraq, his regime owed over USD 100 billion in external debt – more than three times its

GDP.95

                                                                                                                         95 Michael Kremer & Seema Jayachandran, “Make Odious Debt Too Risky to Issue”, The Financial Times (8 May 2003), online: The Financial Times <http://www.ft.com/home/us>.

 

41

This section builds on the scholarship on the odious debt debate and advocates loan sanctions as

a system by which so-called “odious” regimes are publicly identified ex ante, and any

subsequent loans granted to those regimes are voidable once that regime loses power. An ex

ante approach can help reduce a sovereign’s debt burden while minimally disrupting the

international debt capital markets by permitting creditors to choose whether to participate in the

ex ante approach, thereby internalizing the costs and benefits of odious debt relief. It concludes

that while institutionalizing ex ante solutions globally is complex and may be impracticable in its

popular iterations, the concept can act as an effective organizing principle for generating political

will to address external debt burdens afflicting developing and emerging market countries.

5.1 Odious Debt

5.1.1 Profligate Borrowers

Unlike with a corporate borrower, sovereigns cannot look to death, dissolution or bankruptcy to

discharge imprudent borrowing. Sovereign debts continually devolve to subsequent generations

of citizens, long after the individuals who borrowed the money have left office. Under a strict

application of the doctrine of state succession, sovereign debt is congenital and ineradicable.96

Thus, successor governments and the citizens they represent (who are, by necessity, never

consulted when money is borrowed by predecessor regimes), are wholly reliant on the

forbearance of their predecessors. The question of odious debt relates to the inheritance by one

regime of the unpaid debts of another, and whether there are any circumstances in which such

debts can be denied.

5.1.2 Odiousness: A Moving Target

“Odious debt” identifies government debt that was incurred with a view to attaining objectives

prejudicial to the interests of the state’s citizens or successor governments. It is generally agreed

that this definition establishes three threshold conditions. First, the population must not have

                                                                                                                         96 Lee C. Buchheit, G. Mitu Gulati & Robert B. Thompson, “The Dilemma of Odious Debts” (2007) 56 Duke L J 1201 [Buchheit, “Dilemma”] at 1207.

 

42

consented to the transaction (drawing a loan or issuing debt) in question. Second, there must be

absence of benefit to the population in both (i) the purpose of the transaction, as creditors should

not be punished for good faith loans that were misspent by corrupt governments, and (ii) in fact,

as principles of unjust enrichment would require populations that derive benefits from bad faith

loans to repay them. Third, the creditor must be aware of the absence of consent and benefit.97

Thus, the doctrine achieves three important results: (1) it reaffirms the responsibility of states to

repay the debt obligations incurred by their governments through a presumption of payment; (2)

it shifts the burden of proving entitlement to relief onto successor governments; and (3) it

significantly binds the conduct that could constitute grounds for avoidance.98

Drawing an analogy to the individual level, the doctrine’s logic is persuasive: just as an

individual cannot be called to repay money that someone fraudulently borrowed in his or her

name, a state should not be responsible for debt that was incurred without its citizens’ consent

and that was not used for their benefit. However, given the extent to which aid and debt relief

have permitted looting by dictators, the efficiency gains from preventing excessive debt would

be greater than the efficiency gains from forgiving odious debt ex post.99 Given this

presumption, it is surprising that there is a paucity of practical financial innovation attempting to

deal with the problem of over-lending and over-borrowing outside of the realm of debt

forgiveness.

The doctrine of odious debt derives from the idea of conferring distinct legal personality to a

state, on the one hand, and to its apparatus (government) on the other.100 It was also based on the

construction of popular sovereignty as the basis for judging the legitimacy of the actions of the

state apparatus as well as on the contractual character of the obligation, as it was understood in

                                                                                                                         97 Sabine Michalowski, Unconstitutional Regimes and the Validity of Sovereign Debt: A Legal Perspective (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2007) at 33.

98 Larry Catá Backer, “Odious Debt Wears Two Faces: Systemic Illegitimacy, Problems, and Opportunities in Traditional Odious Debt Conceptions in Globalized Economic Regimes” (2007) 70 Law & Contemp Probs 1 at 3. 99 Seema Jayachandran & Michael Kremer, “Odious Debt” (2006) 96:1 Am Econ Rev 82 at 91.

100 Supra note 98 at 8.

 

43

civil law jurisdictions.101 Augmented by the Russian academic Alexander Sack, this Aristotelian

construction of state debt, the state, and its apparatus as autonomous institutions, and the rules

under which each would be tied to the others, has become a general construction of international

law. Sack’s functional approach based on a separation between state and its apparatus assumed

that validity of indebtedness had to be based on the compliance by the apparatus of its

obligations to the state (and its citizens) in the context of the incurrence (and use) of any funds

secured by debt.102

A debt is odious, then, not because of the illegitimacy of the state apparatus but because of the

absence of a legitimate relationship between the debt and the state itself. Legitimacy is based on

demonstrating the application of the trust relationship between the state and its apparatus in

relation to the debt. Odious debts cannot be considered void; rather, they become a form of

private debt, in that the rights to repay follow the agents of the apparatus that engaged in an

illegitimate action in the name of the state. For Sack, a successor regime has a double burden of

showing that the contested debt was not incurred for the public benefit and that the creditors

were aware of the private nature of the loan they were making.103 Therefore, discharging such

burden shifts to creditors, who must show that some or all of the proceeds actually served a

public purpose.

More recent work on odious debt moves beyond the conventional construction of the doctrine.

Whereas Sack’s approach calls for a loan-by-loan analysis, the complexity of today’s debt capital

markets requires that contemporary odious debt emphasize the odious nature of regimes, rather

than circumstances surrounding each loan. All loans to a dictatorial regime would, therefore, be

presumptively odious and liable to repudiation.104 Sack’s approach could, he recognized, expand

well beyond its original confines, using evolving moral- and human-rights notions. Sack argued,

for example, that German bond debt used to buy territory seized from Poland was not odious.

                                                                                                                         101 Ibid. Whereas common law focused on compensation for contractual breach, civil law tended to view contract obligations more strictly.

102 Ibid at 9. 103 Supra note 97 at 41-2. 104 Buchheit, “Dilemma”, supra note 96.

 

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Though the funds went to an odious purpose (the colonization by Germans of formerly Polish

territory), the Polish landowners were paid, and the funds remained in the hands of the Polish

polity. While morally repugnant, the debt should not have been deemed odious as a matter of

law.105 Proponents of the odious debt doctrine use this example to support its substantially

broader reach.106 This paper’s proposal of ex ante declarations of odiousness constitutes a bridge

between the traditional and the expanded concepts of odious debt.

This new conception is illustrated in a corruption case where a tribunal at the International

Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes denied a claim by Nasir Ibrahim Ali, a Dubai-

based Canadian businessman, against the Kenyan government over a contract dispute after it

discovered the contract had been secured illegally through a USD 2 million bribe paid to former

President Daniel arap Moi.107 The tribunal rejected the argument that Mr. Ali’s money

constituted a personal gift, even one ostensibly intended for public use, holding that the money

was paid as a bribe to further the interests of Mr. Ali and of President Moi in his personal

capacity, and not to benefit Kenyan citizens. The tribunal held that the state was not liable for an

obligation incurred for the benefit of its head of state, and rejected the notion that the bribe might

have been excused by “any local custom in Kenya purporting to validate bribery committed . . .

in violation of international public policy.”108 This case reflects not only a typical “odious” loan

to a despot to the benefit of his personal purse but also “the power of the Western-oriented

universalism inherent in the doctrine as it has come to be extended to corruption.”109

                                                                                                                         105 Supra note 98 at 14.

106 Patricia Adams, “Iraq’s Odious Debts” (2004) 526 Policy Analysis, online: Cato Institute: <http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa526.pdf> at 4.

107 World Duty Free Company Ltd v. Kenya, ICSID Case No ARB/00/7; IIC 277 (2006), online: Investment Claims, <http://www.investmentclaims.com/subscriber_article?script=yes&id=/ic/Awards/law-iic-277-2006&recno=1&searchType=Quick&query=kenya>.

108 Ibid at para 172.

109 Supra note 98 at 15.

 

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Along with scholarship advocating a wider interpretation of odiousness and such arbitral

decisions, the original concept of “odious” debt has transformed into “illegitimate” debt. It is

held that debt is legitimate only when incurred by democratically elected governments abiding

by all international human rights norms, and only to the extent such debt actually benefits the

citizens of the state.110 However, this approach assumes the legitimacy of the systems through

which debt is incurred. That is, it assumes the legitimacy of the global capital markets – an

assumption subsumed under the general presumption that all sovereign debts must be repaid.

Generally, international law requires a successor government to honour the public debt incurred

by predecessor regimes.111 Many creditors lend to governments without regard to their

legitimacy, and successor governments typically repay the loans. For example, South Africa is

repaying apartheid-era debt, assuming that repudiation would negatively affect its access to the

capital markets.112 Given that successor governments to odious regimes do not repudiate odious

debts, an alternative is needed – one in which creditors will not originate debt if that debt could

be repudiated by successor governments without loss of access to credit. It has been shown that

under such equilibrium, potential dictators might in fact be dissuaded from overthrowing

representative governments.113

                                                                                                                         110 Ibid at 8.

111 Vikram Nehru & Mark Thomas, “The Concept of Odious Debt: Some Considerations” in Carlos A. Primo Braga & Dörte Dömeland, eds, Debt Relief and Beyond: Lessons Learned and Challenges Ahead (Washington, DC: The World Bank, 2009) [Braga, “Debt Relief”] at 206.

112 As President of South Africa, Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress were pressured not to renounce apartheid-era debt and the government distanced itself from calls to repudiate that debt based on the doctrine of odious debt, as it was considered important not to default on debts in order to attract critical foreign investment. See Robert Howse, “The Concept of Odious Debt in Public International Law” (2007) United Nations Conference on Trade and Development Discussion Paper No. 185, online: UNCTAD <http://www.unctad.org/en/docs/osgdp20074_en.pdf> at 13.

113 Supra note 99.

 

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5.1.3 Implementation

The doctrine of odious debt remains a minority view among legal scholars.114 First, whether or

not international law recognizes the doctrine is controversial.115 If odious debt is to be

considered law, it would be customary international public law.116 This would require that the

doctrine be applied in practice by states consistently over time.117 Like many concepts in

international law, odious debt has been shaped by multiple normative sources: formal concepts

of sovereignty and statehood, notions of political justice and accountability, ideas of fair dealing

and equity in contractual relations. While odious debt has been used by a handful of states,118

there has been no consistent use by states over time, nor has the doctrine established the

subjective element (opinio juris) of customary international law through state pronouncements

such as official statements, laws, or treaties.119 There are further difficulties in international law.

An expanded definition of odious debt requires that, at the time at which the loan contract was

made (or, in the case of bonds, when the notes were purchased), the creditor knew or ought to

have known that the funds were intended for purposes contrary to the interests of the population.

Not only is proving subjective knowledge of this kind a difficult proposition, but there is also no

obvious international legal rule that establishes an appropriate standard for creditor behaviour in

this respect.

                                                                                                                         114 Ibid at 83. 115 Supra note 97 at 34. 116 Gelpern, “Odious, Not Debt”, supra note 87 at 105. 117 Statute of the International Court of Justice annexed to the Charter of the United Nations, 26 June 1945, art. 38(1)(b). 118 The repudiation by the US of Cuba’s debts with Spain is a significant example of debt cancellation based on the doctrine of odious debt. Those debts were incurred by Spain to finance its operations in Cuba during the Spanish-American War of 1898. Other examples include Mexico’s refusal in 1867 to assume Austria’s debts, which were contracted to strengthen its power over Mexico; the UK’s refusal in 1902 to assume the debts of the Boer Republics, which were contracted to finance their war against Britain; and the refusal of Germany to assume Polish debts after World War I. See supra note 97 at 34-5. See also Buchheit, "Dilemma”, supra note 96 at 1212-13.

119 Supra note 111 at 208-09.

 

47

Next, as a matter of political feasibility, it is questionable whether consensus in the international

community could easily be achieved where such political judgments about existing regimes and

their capacity to participate in international economic relations. Odious debt’s failure to gain

popularity is also partly due to the concern that the concept could prove a slippery slope:

countries might declare even legitimate debt as odious in order to renege. Further, in models of

the doctrine that call for an independent adjudicating body with the power to declare debt void,

such a body could nullify legitimate debt if it placed a high value on the welfare of a particular

debtor country.120

The objective of ensuring that a government uses the proceeds of its debt issuances (or external

loans) for the benefit of their country’s citizens is laudable. Policies promoted by civil society

organizations probably do little to reduce the costs of defaulting on illegitimate loans, but the ex

ante approach does offer a viable solution to the problem of borrowing for illegitimate purposes.

The approach would also minimize the impact on non-odious governments, thereby creating

minimal distortion to global sovereign debt management. However, an odious debt framework is

not a costless solution. An odious debt framework could, if implemented, have a dampening

effect on certain states undertaking development projects, if there is fear in the market that the

state government might be declared odious. Such a chilling effect would clearly be counter-

productive for an approach to sovereign debt finance aimed squarely at facilitating sustainable

development in developing countries.

Finally, even an effective ex ante odious debt regime would not obviate the problem of

fungibilty. That is, debt provided for a non-odious purpose may indirectly contribute to odious

purposes, in that the sovereign is enabled to free other funds that would otherwise be needed for

non-odious purposes and put them to odious purposes.121 This militates in favour of a system

whereby the entirety of a state’s future debt is odious, rather than one that is applied on a case-

by-case (debt-by-debt) basis. However, it should be borne in mind that a state that is cut off

from the external loan market or from issuing debt into the bond markets because it is deemed

                                                                                                                         120 Supra note 99 at 82. 121 Supra note 112 at 18-9

 

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odious, might simply extract available internal resources more ruthlessly, exacerbating domestic

problems. Clearly, the economic costs of odious debt are not trivial and, as such, call for further

and better consideration by stakeholders in the sovereign debt debate.

The problem of debt incurred by odious regimes to finance morally repugnant activities is as

ancient as the sovereign debt market. The problem has yet to be solved and the doctrine of

odious debt might not be the solution, for it is not without definitional vagueness, legal

complexity, and political impracticality. However, the concept is valuable in its contribution to

the ex ante approaches to stabilizing developing countries’ debt capital markets. The readily

available alternatives of loan sanctions in conjunction with contractual solutions to creditor

coordination achieve a similar financial outcome.

5.2 Loan Sanctions

Low income, heavily indebted countries have benefitted significantly from debt relief programs

promulgated under the HIPC: by 2009, they had proffered debt relief of USD 117 billion in

nominal terms for 35 countries, which lead directly to a decrease in debt their servicing payments

and an increase in pro-poor growth programs.122 The debt relief movement rests on the argument

that debt impoverishes poor countries, preventing growth,123 and debt relief can have immediate

and positive impact on economic growth. Notwithstanding the sincerity of motives underlying

debt relief for the world’s poorest states and the economic impact debt cancellation can provide,

the fundamentals that lead to the accumulation of unsustainable debt burdens remain unaffected.

Debt forgiveness fails to address a root cause of the problem: over-lending. Further, while

donors grant debt relief to countries under the various HIPC policy initiatives, countries with

                                                                                                                         122 Dörte Dömeland & Carlos A. Primo Braga, “Introduction” in Braga, “Debt Relief”, supra note 110 at 1.

123 Joseph E. Stiglitz, Making Globalization Work (New York: W.W. Norton & Company Ltd., 2006) at 227. However, the link between debt relief and growth is tenuous; it is also arguable that because money is fungible, debt relief enables governments to spend more on good and bad things alike. To bolster this argument, scholars like William Easterly point to debt relief clients such as Angola, Ethiopia and Rwanda who all have heavy military spending programs: see William Easterly, The Elusive Quest for Growth (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2002) at 22.

 

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debt obligations incurred by arguably illegitimate predecessors are not eligible for such debt

relief.124 Thus, the debt relief movement has also come to rest on the doctrine of odious debt.

The doctrine traditionally focused on the circumstances under which a successor state could

avoid the obligation to pay the debts incurred by a predecessor state, particularly where

succession occurred after civil wars, revolutions, or other contests for control of government.

Joseph Stiglitz suggests shifting the onus of relieving states of debt overhang from debtors to

lenders,125 thus moving the focus of debt relief from effect to source. However, it is facile to

assert that “[l]enders should make sure that any loan is limited to the amount the country can

repay”126 because institutional lenders are, by definition, profit-maximizing and encourage

indebtedness because it is profitable. As a solution, Stiglitz proposes international bankruptcy

law, as described in section 3, to solve the need for a systemic, transparent way of restructuring

debt and establishing debt forgiveness criteria.127 However, international bankruptcy laws alone

would not necessarily align creditors’ and debtors’ incentives to curtail over-lending.128 It might

be more effective to align creditor and debtor interests within the loan markets at the source of

the debt. One tool within this market that receives little attention is the loan sanction.

While the application of odious debt to ex ante approaches has been proposed in the realm of

traditional lending, this approach could equally be extended to cover sovereign bonds. States

participating in the sanctions would disallow assets held abroad by legitimate successor

governments from being seized to enforce repayment of this debt. The courts of participating

countries would not enforce these contracts.

                                                                                                                         124 Ibid.

125 Ibid at 216.

126 Ibid at 228.

127 Ibid at 233.

128 Financial innovation can help align lender and debtor incentives: Argentina’s GDP bond ties interest payments to economic growth, incentivising creditors to encourage the state’s economic growth. However, no matter how ingeniously a debt product might be tailored, the sovereign debt capital markets are not necessarily accessible by the world’s poorest countries, nor does it address the mounting loans that create debt overhang.

 

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For loan sanctions to work, a declaration would need to be made that successor governments to a

named regime would not be bound by that regime’s debt obligations incurred post-declaration.

The hope is that such a declaration would prevent illegitimate debts from being incurred. A

declaration that encourages successor regimes to renounce odious debts would serve to

discourage foreign lenders and bond investors in the first place. The deterrence effect would

affect investors, whether or not they signed on to the declaration, as expected likelihood or

repayment should decline. While some lenders and investors might issue loans and purchase

bonds no matter what, the ex ante approach would still help successor governments repudiate

illegitimate debt by eliminating much of the reputational risk associated with such a decision.

5.2.1 Debt Management & Diplomacy

Whereas most financial sanctions impose legal penalties on entities that transact with the

sanctioned regime at the time of the transaction, the ex ante loan approach does not operate by

penalizing firms at the time they enter into illegitimate contracts. Rather, states declare that they

will not punish successors to illegitimate regimes for refusing to recognize illegitimate debt

obligations. If all countries whose law is customarily used to adjudicate debt contracts (usually

English law and New York law) subscribe to such a declaration, a creditor that lends or investor

that purchases bonds in defiance of the declaration would encounter difficulty enforcing the

terms of the contract; seeking to enforce the debt obligation, the courts would find the contract to

be void and, therefore, unenforceable. A creditor could always seek enforcement in another

legal system, but there would be significant uncertainty as to how and, indeed, whether the debt

contracts would be enforced.

Stiglitz recognizes that loan sanctions can be more effective than trade sanctions129 and indeed, a

declaration that contracts are not binding on successor regimes has at least two advantages

relative to trade sanctions. Trade sanctions are often ineffective because they create incentives

for evasion by third parties. Further, they often harm the population of the target country as

much as the targeted regime. Loan sanctions, particularly when applied against regimes that are

                                                                                                                         129 Supra note 123 at 230.

 

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repressive and corrupt, can potentially overcome these problems. By declaring ab initio that

future loans to sanctioned regimes are illegitimate, lending states would discourage repayment of

odious debt and, in turn, discourage lending to sanctioned regimes.130 Ex ante loan sanctions

would be self-enforcing by putting states on notice that future loans would be considered the

responsibility of that regime and could not be transferred to successor governments. However,

loan sanctions would not shut out legitimate regimes from accessing the markets, thus addressing

calls to deal with the problems of both over-borrowing and over-lending.

While some states have made moves to rein in loans and investments in particular countries,

there is no public sign of a multilateral effort to produce a unified approach to odious debt. Loan

and debt sanctions are an additional tool that might be especially effective where trade sanctions

fail (such as in 1985 when the United Nations Security Council imposed trade sanctions on

South Africa, but the apartheid regime continued to borrow from private banks throughout the

1980s)131. In such situations, loan sanctions might present an effective tool to prevent the

development of debt overhang and, as such, may be worthy of experimentation. In both the loan

and bond markets, a reduction in funding to odious regimes could have negative short-term

effects similar to those created by trade sanctions. However, the loan sanctions could deliver

long-term benefits to citizens by reducing the country's debt burden, thus ensuring that sovereign

debt is managed sustainably. The prospect of sustainable growth and development outweighs

any short-term hardship from less money flowing into the country.

5.2.2 Ex post Benefits of an Ex Ante Approach

Presumably, where repayment of debt obligations by a successor government is uncertain,

investors will seek compensation for the risk. Thus, the potential loss of a flow of future profits

to the lender would be priced into the cost of bond spread (or loan interest rate). The higher the

                                                                                                                         130 Similarly, states could disallow the enforcement of odious debt by refusing to permit seizure of assets. Suppose a body that has the power to prevent seizure of assets to enforce repayment of certain loans receives utility from repaying creditors, and utility from spending money on social programs for citizens. It has been shown that decision-maker’s acting ex ante, would not allow odious loans and also incentivise lending when it benefits the population – that is, when the government is not odious. 131 Supra note 112 at 13.

 

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probability of regime change, the wider the spread (or higher rate) creditors will require. At a

point, the risk of regime change will be so high that creditors will not lend and the market for

sovereign debt will dry up. Thus, loan sanctions should work no matter the length of an odious

regime remains in power. In fact, given that loan sanctions encourage the pricing of risk into the

relevant interest rate, an odious regime should be worse off even if it continues to receive loans

throughout its term. However, this might not apply to all odious regimes. Perversely, bonds

issued by the most ruthless of odious regimes, which might be stable from the perspective of

market participants, would be more attractive investment that bonds issued by odious regimes

that wield power more ineffectively.

Still, loan sanction theory can positively inform other areas of the sovereign debt markets and

developing states. Governments participating in enforcing loan sanctions could also condition

foreign aid to a successor government on its not making payments to fulfill illegitimate contracts.

This is an extension of the research of economics professors Seema Jayachandran and Michael

Kremer, which suggests that ex ante declarations can discourage potential odious lenders without

unravelling the debt capital markets. They hypothesize that loan sanctions can eliminate the

penalty a country faces for repudiating debt incurred by a sanctioned regime. Further, creditors

would anticipate this event and therefore would not issue loans to a sanctioned regime in the first

place.132 This reasoning is equally applicable to institutional investors investing in sovereign

debt.

Jayachandran and Kremer hypothesize that loan sanctions imposed on an odious regime can also

be welfare-improving for the population of that country relative to the population’s welfare

under an equilibrium in which the odious government is not sanctioned and borrows

indiscriminately. This suggests that an advantage of ex ante loan sanctions, relative to trade

sanctions, is the impact on the welfare of the target country’s citizens. A state’s population bears

a smaller debt burden when a loan sanction is in place, because it would not have to repay odious

debt that is outstanding when the dictator is toppled.133 As discussed, a declaration that contracts

                                                                                                                         132 Supra note 99 at 90-1.

133 Ibid at 90.

 

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will not be considered transferable to future governments should restrict the regime’s access to

the international capital markets in the short term. While this might have an impact on the state’s

citizens through the state’s reduced investment, it offers the benefit of not having to repay in the

long term. Where financing disproportionately benefits a small, exploitive minority, the benefit

of not having to repay the debt will presumably outweigh the cost of forgone investment and the

state’s population will be better off in the long run.

5.2.3 Overcoming Challenges

The flexible concept of odiousness renders it inherently difficult to determine what criteria

should dictate whether a state is deserving of loan sanctions. Rather than being adopted

overnight, it is more likely that loan sanctions would be imposed against future odious regimes,

from which a general policy could evolve.134 A wide body of internationally agreed norms and

treaties provide some basis for decision-making. Sanctions could be used against regimes that

use military coercion, abuse human rights, suppress democratic freedoms or demonstrate

widespread mismanagement of funds. Other standards would develop through subsequent

normative discourse and negotiation, expanding and clarifying the criteria to use loan sanctions.

Re-examining (and lifting) sanctions once a regime makes significant improvements to such

conditions would be difficult, given it introduces a subjective legitimacy standard. However, the

ex ante imposition of sanctions would require a more open discussion, thereby leading to a less

political decision than the ex post subjective determination of whether past sovereign debt

constitutes odious debt and should be forgiven.

Next, there is the question of who declares that contracts are non-transferable. What

international body has sufficient legitimacy to impose sanctions, especially considering the

multiplicity of institutional investors and the fact that the debt obligations will undoubtedly have

been traded in the secondary markets? In the absence of a multilateral body, it is a normative

question as to which states would need to be involved in order to plausibly deter financial flows

to sanctioned regimes and lend the ex ante approach legitimacy. With regard to who could

                                                                                                                         134 Ibid at 91-2.

 

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implement the declaration, the answer depends on the penalties faced by a successor government

that chooses not to uphold contracts.

It may be difficult to achieve consensus among states; where any major state does not make an

ex ante declaration, the target regime could effectively be protected from other states’ loan

sanctions. Firms in countries that do not support the declaration may still curtail their behaviour

for self-interested financial reasons. Recall that the UN Security Council imposed trade

sanctions on South Africa’s apartheid regime in 1985, while the state continued borrowing from

private banks throughout the 1980s.135 However, given that loan sanctions will increase risk and,

therefore, bond spreads, a country pursuing contracts with an illegitimate government primarily

for commercial reasons might find these contracts less attractive if other governments do not

consider a successor government to be bound by them. Further, in contrast to traditional trade

sanctions, even if lenders and investors continue to do business with a regime that is subject to

loan sanctions, the people of the country benefit later on. When a successor government takes

over, it will be encouraged to repudiate the remainder of the contracts (that is, not repay loans

and renegotiate asset-sale contracts on better terms), which will benefit the people of the country

financially.

While eliminating creditors’ ability to seize assets would not necessarily eliminate lending to a

sanctioned country, it could coordinate players so that the lending does not in fact take place.

Given that the UK and the US host the majority of sovereign debt contracts, it has been argued

that a declaration by those countries would be sufficient to materially improve the bargaining

positions of successor regimes that wished to renegotiate these contracts and thus to weaken

firms’ commercial incentives to enter into the contracts.136 If, for example, the US, the EU,

Japan, and the United Nations Security Council all imposed loan sanctions on an odious regime,

it is plausible that this would help coordinate creditors and debtors on an equilibrium in which

                                                                                                                         135 Supra note 99 at 82-3. However, this potential collective action problem did not diminish the political role that trade sanctions played, nor do these problems take away from the similar role that loan sanctions could play.

136 See Center for Global Development, “Preventing Odious Obligations: A New Tool for Protecting Citizens from Illegitimate Regimes” (2010), online: Center for Global Development <http://www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/1424618>.

 

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loans to the dictator would not be repaid, and therefore would not be extended in the first

instance.137

While making decisions regarding debt legitimacy ex ante does address potential time

consistency problems, it cannot address the problem of political bias – either for or against the

odious regime by the decision maker.138 The decision to impose sanctions would always be a

political matter, and an ex ante approach could not eliminate the need to make subjective

determinations of state legitimacy. This is a less political task than the current approach of

making ex post judgements of regimes, but the problem of bias remains with ex ante approaches.

Given that countries could declare legitimate debt odious in order to renege, models to

implement the doctrine call for an independent adjudicating body with the power to declare debt

void. The problem of institutional bias in such independent body could also be anticipated and

curtailed “by requiring a supermajority of the deciding body’s members to prevent seizure of

assets. With a supermajoritarian voting rule, if members’ biases are not completely correlated,

the decisive voter would be less biased.”139

For the ex ante loan sanction approach to function, declarations of illegitimacy would also have

to be generally accepted domestically. Successor regimes would have to consider contracts

signed under the predecessor government to be illegitimate. Empirical studies suggest that this is

not assured. Successor governments, concerned about their reputation, tend to accept

responsibility for debt, independent of the nature of the preceding regime.140 Failure to repay

                                                                                                                         137 Supra note 99 at 90. 138 Ibid at 90-1. 139 Ibid.

140 Ibid at 85-6. For example, Daniel Ortega, leader of the Sandinista government that succeeded the government of Anastasio Somoza in 1979, told the United Nations General Assembly that his government would repudiate Somoza’s debt (of which between USD 100 and USD 500 million was said to have been looted) but he reconsidered when Cuban allies advised against alienating Nicaragua from Western capitalist countries.

 

56

debt hurts a country’s reputation, and a country values its reputation for reasons that go beyond

access to credit.141

Notwithstanding these problems, it is important to note that loan sanctions could be a valuable

addition to the toolkit of international diplomacy and development and, therefore, are worthy of

further experimentation. Despite significant debt relief provided to a set of developing countries

through the HIPC Initiative, the hope that debt relief would translate into significantly more

resources (and, thus, economic growth) appears not to have been realized.142 Assuming that the

poorest countries cannot grow without reducing their debt burden,143 and that debt forgiveness

has not proven to be an entirely effective solution, the poorest states need solutions to help them

escape debt overhang. Loan sanctions fill an apparent lacuna in the debt relief and development

movements by shifting the focus of sovereign debt restructuring from its complex, technical

details to creditor motivations and behaviour. At a time of unprecedented political upheaval in

developing states emerging contemporaneously with a global financial crisis and sovereign debt

distress, such behavioural analysis could support a range of prescriptions to deal with odious

debt.

                                                                                                                         141 Harold L. Cole & Patrick J. Kehoe, “Reputation Spillover Across Relationships: Reviving Reputation Models of Debt” (1996) National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 5486, online: The National Bureau of Economic Research <http://www.nber.org/papers/w5486>.

142 William Easterly, “Debt Relief? Think Again” (2001) 27 Foreign Policy 127 at 127.

143 Supra note 123 at 225.

 

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6. CONCLUSION

The recent financial crisis has seriously depressed global economic activity,144 increased

economic volatility, and heightened risks associated with unsustainable sovereign debt and

sovereign debt downgrades. Rising borrowing requirements in high income countries has

created strong competition for capital,145 particularly for low and middle-income countries that

lack diverse economies, deep financial markets, and sufficient resources to respond to the crisis

alone. Notwithstanding the remarkable resilience of many low-income economies since the

crisis, the future is uncertain. The current sovereign debt crisis in the eurozone demands an

analysis of effective debt restructuring alternatives to costly bailouts, like the IMF-sponsored

bailout of Greece. The inquiry is important not only because of the recent financial crisis and

current sovereign debt distress, but also because sovereign debt restructuring occurs constantly:

“serial default on external debt – that is, repeated sovereign default – is the norm throughout

every region in the world…”146

The axiomatic understanding that it takes multiple policy instruments to pursue multiple policy

objectives is particularly apt in the context of sovereign debt restructuring. Improving debt

management so that it can better mitigate and resolve sovereign debt crises depends on the

availability of a multiplicity of tools. The status quo calls upon too few tools to accomplish

                                                                                                                         144 The debt-stricken euro-area economy slowed in the second quarter of 2011, expanding by only 0.2 percent. Italy grew by 0.3 percent, Spain, by 0.2 percent, while France stagnated and Germany’s GDP rose by only 0.1 percent: “Economic and Financial Indicators: Overview”, The Economist (20 August 2011).

145 Phillip R. D. Anderson, Anderson Caputo Silva & Antonio Velandia-Rubiano, “Public Debt Management in Emerging Market Economies: Has This Time Been Different?” in Braga, “Sovereign Debt”, supra note 2 at 408. 146 Carmen M. Reinhart & Kenneth S. Rogoff, “This Time It’s Different: A Panoramic View of Eight Centuries of Financial Crises” (2008) 13882 National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper, online: National Bureau of Economic Research <http://www.nber.org/papers/w13882>.

 

58

increasingly complicated tasks, which is not helped by the fact that changes in the sovereign debt

capital markets occur gradually.

This paper explores the two predominant legal debt restructuring alternatives to bailouts: the free

market, contractual approach and the statutory sovereign bankruptcy approach. The inability of

the former to offer a panacea and the difficulty of implementing the latter has left countries with

ad hoc, and often ineffective, responses to sovereign debt crises. The analysis reveals that the

contractual approach to debt restructuring is imperfect but effective. Recognizing that sovereign

debt defaults are costly for sovereigns and their creditors, the paper rejects traditional unanimity

clauses in favour of CACs as a partial ex ante solution that can be immediately implemented to

facilitate future debt workouts. While CACs do address holdout problems, contracts are

inadequate substitutes for the theoretical benefits of sovereign bankruptcy.

Both the contractual and bankruptcy options address the holdout problem of sovereign debt

restructuring; but the statutory approach does it more effectively. Unlike the use of CACs,

bankruptcy also helps solve the interim deficit financing problem, while providing a transparent

and predictable, legally enforceable system of first priority. The bankruptcy analysis, however,

makes a significant assumption: that states and their creditors would be bound by an international

convention. Notwithstanding the fact that states should want to ratify a convention that

addresses both holdout and funding problems, political considerations currently render the

implementation of a sovereign bankruptcy regime particularly difficult.

The volatile outlook of the global debt markets has highlighted the importance of developing and

maintaining a diverse range of financing sources and strengthening debt-management

frameworks.147 This paper demonstrates that the machinery for mitigating bond defaults and

facilitating efficient restructuring is not elusive. There is, however, scope to further develop ex

ante solutions to mitigate sovereign debt distress. The goal of this article has been to merge the

traditional solutions to sovereign debt restructuring with the theoretical approach suggested by

the doctrine of odious debt. The analysis implies a need for international law and public policy

                                                                                                                         147 Phillip Anderson and Eriko Togo, “Government Debt Management in Low-Income Countries” in Braga, “Debt Relief”, supra note 111 at 303

 

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to recognize the existing complexity of sovereign obligations and to consider creditor co-

responsibility in the debt capital markets.

The rich academic discussion of the doctrine of odious debt is useful because it shifts the focus

from technical restructuring procedures to creditor motivations and behaviour. The analysis

could support a range of prescriptions to deal with odious debt, a concept whose time has come

in the current climate of developing state political unrest and global sovereign debt distress. The

odious debt debate points to a useful analytic device, but falls far short of providing a practical

policy proposal. This is the benefit of loan sanctions in ex ante crisis prevention.

Notwithstanding potential obstacles, loan sanctions are deserving of addition to the toolkit of

international law, diplomacy and development.

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