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Abstract We study how cross-country macroeconomic spillovers caused by sovereign default affect equilibrium bailouts. Because of portfolio diversification, the default of one country causes a macroeconomic contraction in other countries, which motivates a bailout. But why do creditor countries choose to bailout debtor countries instead of their own private sector? We show that this is because an external bailout could be cheaper than a domestic bailout. We also show that although anticipated bailouts lead to higher borrowing, they can be Pareto improving not only ex post (after a country has defaulted) but also ex ante (before the country chooses its debt).
sovereign default, Financial networks (including contagion, systemic risk, regulation), Macroeconomic theory (monetary models, models of taxation), bailout, macroeconomic spillover
sovereign default, Financial networks (including contagion, systemic risk, regulation), Macroeconomic theory (monetary models, models of taxation), bailout, macroeconomic spillover
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