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To err is human: US rating agencies and the interwar foreign government debt crisis

This article provides a new perspective on the interwar foreign debt crisis by analysing original data on the credit ratings, market yields and subsequent performance of government borrowers in the New York market. We focus on the four agencies that are known to have been operating at the time (Fitc...

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Published in:European review of economic history 2011-12, Vol.15 (3), p.495-538
Main Authors: FLANDREAU, MARC, GAILLARD, NORBERT, PACKER, FRANK
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description This article provides a new perspective on the interwar foreign debt crisis by analysing original data on the credit ratings, market yields and subsequent performance of government borrowers in the New York market. We focus on the four agencies that are known to have been operating at the time (Fitch, Moody's, Poor's and Standard Statistics). We provide a description of the rise of the market for grades and gather information on the products sold, price schedules, etc. We find that rating agencies did exhibit features similar to those that have attracted considerable interest recently: namely, they did not react until the crisis had already begun and then implemented massive downgrades. We conclude by suggesting that, given the less than stellar record of the agencies, their emergence in the 1930s as a regulatory tool will have to be explained in future research.
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source ABI/INFORM global; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Oxford Journals Online
subjects Bond issues
Bond portfolios
Corporate bonds
Credit ratings
Debt
Deficit financing
Economic history
Economic theory
Financial securities
Foreign governments
Government bonds
Inflation
Interwar period
Investments
Investors
Loan defaults
Rating services
Ratings & rankings
Regulation of financial institutions
Securities markets
Sovereign debt
Stock exchanges
Studies
title To err is human: US rating agencies and the interwar foreign government debt crisis
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