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Latin American Debt Crisis TEAM FOUR AYO AKINKUOWO CARLA BRACKMAN JARED CAROLLO JERIMI NUCKOLLS The International Financing Climate The Bretton Woods system collapses in 1971 Floating Exchange Rate Global financing shift from IMF, World Bank to commercial banks Oil Shock of 1973 & 1979 The rich get richer… Petrodollar Recycling Supply-side Shift in loan packages offered Insufficient (or little regard) credit risk evaluation Mentality that countries could not go bankrupt Demand-side Non-productive investments Growing interest payments, depreciating peso, capital flight The Meltdown The 1970s – Runaway inflation and multiple failed attempts to stabilize inflation and the exchange rate August, 1982 – Mexico’s minister of finance declared that Mexico would be unable to meets its August 16th $80 billion debt Commercial banks refused new loans and demanded payment October, 1983 - 27 nations had rescheduled their debts, 16 were Latin American nations Mexico, Brazil, Venezuela and Argentina owed approximately $176 billion (74% of the total LDC debt outstanding) Banks collapsing, credit crunch, increase in unemployment, decrease in GDP The Way Out The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Group of 7 (G7) led the response effort which occurred in four phases: August, 1982: International Lender of Last Resort September, 1985: Baker Plan – increased voluntary spending to offset recessionary impact of first phase September, 1987: Bake Plan II - coined “market-based menu approach” was adopted to assist lenders in recovering their money March, 1989: Brady Plan - launched a fifth round of debt rescheduling and increased resources to reduce debt in Latin America