The IMF's Imperiled Priority

Melissa Boudreau, G. Gulati
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The role of the Official Sector institutions as lenders in crisis situations has evolved over time, and, particularly in the context of the current euro area debt crisis, into something akin to a lender of last resort. Institutions like the International Monetary Fund regularly provide distressed sovereigns with lending at affordable rates when private funding has dried up. To be able to provide this kind of emergency relief in a manner that does not result in large losses for their stakeholders, these Official Sector institutions often assert that their lending will have de facto priority over private lending. As a practical matter, since other creditors could not sue to interfere with the sovereign’s choices regarding whom to pay and in what order, de facto priority was all that was needed in the past for the system to function. All of this may have changed since October 2012 as a result of one case: NML Capital v. Republic of Argentina. This case has given private creditors, for the first time in history, a weapon with which they can go after payments made to any other creditor that has equal legal priority to them, potentially including any Official Sector institution without de jure priority. This leads to the question of whether Official Sector institutions’ half-century-old claim of de facto priority for their lending status can be said to have evolved, as a matter of customary international law, to a level of de jure priority.
IMF岌岌可危的优先事项
随着时间的推移,官方部门机构在危机情况下作为贷款人的角色已经演变,特别是在当前欧元区债务危机的背景下,已经演变成类似于最后贷款人的角色。国际货币基金组织(imf)等机构经常在私人资金枯竭时,以可承受的利率向陷入困境的主权国家提供贷款。为了能够在不给其利益攸关方造成重大损失的情况下提供这种紧急救济,这些官方部门机构往往声称,它们的贷款实际上比私人贷款优先。作为一个实际问题,由于其他债权人不能起诉干涉主权国家关于向谁付款和按什么顺序付款的选择,因此,在过去,该体系运转所需要的只是事实上的优先权。自2012年10月NML Capital诉阿根廷共和国(Republic of Argentina)一案以来,这一切可能都发生了变化。这一案件在历史上第一次给了私人债权人一种武器,他们可以用它来追讨向与他们具有同等法律优先权的任何其他债权人支付的款项,可能包括任何没有法律优先权的官方部门机构。这就产生了一个问题,即作为习惯国际法的一个问题,是否可以说官方部门机构半个世纪以来对其贷款地位的事实上的优先要求已经发展到法律上的优先水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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