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World Maps for the Debt Paradigm: Risk Ranking the Poorer Nations in the 1970s

USA. Obverse. Gold 50 dollar of Humbert, A., San Francisco (Calif.), 1851

USA. Obverse. Gold 50 dollar of Humbert, A., San Francisco (Calif.), 1851. American Numismatic Society. (Public Domain)

Author: Quinn Slobodian

This article offers a new account of the rise of the ranked nation-state through a genealogy of the category of country risk, which emerged in the 1970s as part of a response to the explosion of sovereign borrowing of petrodollars by Global South and Eastern bloc countries. Incorporating intangible qualities like political stability and the social fabric through a version of environmental scanning, country risk ratings quantified both the ability and the willingness of sovereigns to repay their debts. Adopted by the US Federal Reserve as a means of imposing the rule of law on global finance in the run-up to the Third World debt crisis, country risk returned in the research of the 1990s as a proxy for good governance, transforming the subjective impressions of managers and bankers into objective realities with policy effects.

Slobodian, Quinn, World Maps for the Debt Paradigm: Risk Ranking the Poorer Nations in the 1970s, Critical Historical Studies, Volume 8, Number 1 (Spring 2021) March 24, 2021). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1086/713524

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