Book contents
- When Nations Can’t Default
- Studies in Macroeconomic History
- When Nations Can’t Default
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Data and Replication
- 1 Introduction
- 2 A Framework for War Reparations
- 3 Sovereign Debt
- 4 Napoleonic Wars Reparations
- 5 Haiti Indemnity and Sovereign Debt
- 6 Franco-Prussian War Indemnities
- 7 Smaller Nineteenth-Century War Reparations
- 8 German World War I Reparations
- 9 Russian and Bulgarian World War I Reparations
- 10 World War II Reparations to the Soviet Bloc
- 11 World War II Reparations to the Allies
- 12 Iraq Gulf War Reparations
- 13 When Nations Can’t Default
- Appendix: Letter to Creditor Committees
- References
- Index
12 - Iraq Gulf War Reparations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2023
- When Nations Can’t Default
- Studies in Macroeconomic History
- When Nations Can’t Default
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Data and Replication
- 1 Introduction
- 2 A Framework for War Reparations
- 3 Sovereign Debt
- 4 Napoleonic Wars Reparations
- 5 Haiti Indemnity and Sovereign Debt
- 6 Franco-Prussian War Indemnities
- 7 Smaller Nineteenth-Century War Reparations
- 8 German World War I Reparations
- 9 Russian and Bulgarian World War I Reparations
- 10 World War II Reparations to the Soviet Bloc
- 11 World War II Reparations to the Allies
- 12 Iraq Gulf War Reparations
- 13 When Nations Can’t Default
- Appendix: Letter to Creditor Committees
- References
- Index
Summary
Chapter 12 is the story of Iraqi reparations imposed after the Gulf War. The rise in Iraqi indebtedness was a consequence of global geopolitical trends in the 1980s, when political lending trumped solvency concerns. It allowed Iraq to obtain financing on terms more favourable than offered by the US government. Reparations were a consequence of the end of the Iran–Iraq War when Iraq invaded Kuwait. Reparations were imposed by a UN Resolution with a direct enforcement mechanism to take money from oil revenues. I use oral history sources to trace how Iraqi debt was restructured after the US invasion in 2003. The restructuring was permeated by politics to inflict harsh terms on creditors at the Paris Club, at a time when creditor-friendly restructurings were the norm. Despite its apparent success, however, in going for a politically expedient deal at the Paris Club, I argue the restructuring missed an opportunity to enshrine a doctrine of odious debt in international law. All debt was written off, except war reparations, which were paid in full through sanctions and war. They proved to be senior to all other debt and did not enter the sovereign debt restructuring.
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- When Nations Can't DefaultA History of War Reparations and Sovereign Debt, pp. 144 - 187Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023