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Time for an ‘odiousness’ rating for government bonds

One positive outcome from Venezuela’s economic catastrophe would be a reform that puts such markets on a more solid financial – and moral – footing

A woman protests against the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in front of riot policemen outside the Cuban embassy in Caracas
A woman protests against the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in front of riot policemen outside the Cuban embassy in Caracas Photo: Getty Images

On August 25, the US government imposed financial sanctions on Venezuela, restricting the ability of President Nicolás Maduro’s government and its oil company, PDVSA, to issue new debt in American capital markets. The sanctions were imposed in response to the regime’s unconstitutional and fraudulent election of a constituent assembly and the de facto closure of the constitutionally elected National Assembly, with its two-thirds opposition majority.

Well-functioning markets should have shut down the Maduro regime’s access to finance long ago. The fact that they didn’t not only shocked the moral sentiments of many, but also revealed a fundamental defect in sovereign debt markets’ institutional architecture. Little good will come from Venezuela’s economic catastrophe, but one positive outcome would be a reform that puts such markets on a more solid financial – and moral – footing.

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