Suturing the Open Veins of Ecuador: Debt, Default and Democracy
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Wade Mansell
and Karen Openshaw
In 2008 the Ecuadorian government received a report on the legitimacy of the country's sovereign debt from an international audit commission appointed by Ecuador's current president, Rafael Correa. This concluded that much of the debt was tainted by illegality and illegitimacy and consequently did not merit repayment. Citing the report's findings as justification, the government stopped making interest payments on certain of the country's bonds, but, rather than repudiating them altogether, engineered a successful buyback at a large discount. Having thus reduced Ecuador's external commercial debt burden by about a third, the government is now planning to address multilateral and bilateral loans also adjudged unlawful by the commission.This article examines the robust approach adopted by the Correa administration to tackling Ecuador's public debts, placing it in the context of the country's troubled economic history and contrasting it with previous defaults and debt workouts which largely worked to Ecuador's disadvantage. In doing so, it considers the use which the government has made of the increasingly prominent concepts of odious and illegitimate debt as a means of combating the indebtedness of the South. The conclusion reached is that, regardless of the final position suggested by international law, the realities of international relations are likely to limit the practicality of legal remedies. Nevertheless, the case of Ecuador provides a new chapter in the continuing academic debate regarding unlawful debt.These, of course, are the legal aspects of Ecuador's endeavours to curtail expenditure desperately needed for other purposes. Underlying the legal implications is the reality of an impoverished nation called upon to continue to service or redeem 'debt' that brought no obvious benefit to the overwhelming majority of its people. Debt repayment has promoted impoverishment and also, if indirectly, facilitated devastating environmental degradation.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
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- Developing Countries in the 21st Century WTO: New Contours of India's Global Engagement
- To What Extent Should Labor and Environmental Standards Be Linked to Trade?
- Debt-for-development Exchanges: The Origins of a Financial Technique
- Anarchy and Development: An Application of the Theory of Second Best
- Law in Asia: The Key Role of Law as a Productive Force for Development
- Competition Law as Development Policy: Evidence from Poland
- Suturing the Open Veins of Ecuador: Debt, Default and Democracy
- From Nominal to Substantive Democracy: The Role and Design of Election Management Bodies
- The Twin Failures of the CDM: Recommendations for the "Copenhagen Protocol"
- Revisiting the Tobin Tax, in the Context of Development and the Financial Crisis
- Decentralization of Development and Nation-Building Today: Reconstructing Colombia from the Margins of Bogotá
- Theoretical Basis and Regulatory Framework for Microtrade: Combining Volunteerism with International Trade towards Poverty Elimination
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Developing Countries in the 21st Century WTO: New Contours of India's Global Engagement
- To What Extent Should Labor and Environmental Standards Be Linked to Trade?
- Debt-for-development Exchanges: The Origins of a Financial Technique
- Anarchy and Development: An Application of the Theory of Second Best
- Law in Asia: The Key Role of Law as a Productive Force for Development
- Competition Law as Development Policy: Evidence from Poland
- Suturing the Open Veins of Ecuador: Debt, Default and Democracy
- From Nominal to Substantive Democracy: The Role and Design of Election Management Bodies
- The Twin Failures of the CDM: Recommendations for the "Copenhagen Protocol"
- Revisiting the Tobin Tax, in the Context of Development and the Financial Crisis
- Decentralization of Development and Nation-Building Today: Reconstructing Colombia from the Margins of Bogotá
- Theoretical Basis and Regulatory Framework for Microtrade: Combining Volunteerism with International Trade towards Poverty Elimination