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  2. World War I reparations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_I_reparations

    This commission would consider the resources available to Germany and her capacity to pay, provide the German Government with an opportunity to be heard on the subject, and decide on the final reparation figure that Germany would be required to pay. In the interim, Germany was required to pay an equivalent of 20 billion gold marks (US$5 billion ...

  3. London Agreement on German External Debts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Agreement_on_German...

    The London Agreement on German External Debts, also known as the London Debt Agreement (German: Londoner Schuldenabkommen), was a debt relief treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and creditor nations. The Agreement was signed in London on 27 February 1953, and came into force on 16 September 1953.

  4. Economic history of World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_history_of_World...

    The reparations levied on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles were, in theory, supposed to restore the damage to the civilian economies, but little of the reparations money went for that. Most of Germany's reparations payments were funded by loans from American banks, and the recipients used them to pay off loans they had from the U.S. Treasury.

  5. War reparations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_reparations

    When Germany stopped making payments in 1932 after the agreement reached at the Lausanne Conference failed to be ratified, [12] Germany had paid only a part of the sum. This still left Germany with debts it had incurred in order to finance the reparations, and these were revised by the Agreement on German External Debts in 1953. After another ...

  6. Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperinflation_in_the...

    The government believed that it would be able to pay off the debt by winning the war and imposing war reparations on the defeated Allies. This was to be done by annexing resource-rich industrial territory in the west and east and imposing cash payments to Germany, similar to the French indemnity that followed German victory over France in 1870. [1]

  7. List of sovereign debt crises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_debt_crises

    Country Date Type, causes, consequences, and references Argentina: 1827: Default. [23] 1890: Baring crisis [23] 1982: Latin American debt crisis [23] 1988–89: Latin American debt crisis [23] 2001: Following years of instability, the Argentine economic crisis (1999–2002) came to a head, and a new government announced it could not meet its ...

  8. More Americans over the age of 60 are paying off student loans than you think. ‘A war on the old and the poor’: 70-year-old with $84K in student loan debt worries Social Security won’t be ...

  9. List of countries by external debt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by...

    This is a list of countries by external debt: it is the total public and private debt owed to nonresidents repayable in internationally accepted currencies, goods or services, where the public debt is the money or credit owed by any level of government, from central to local, and the private debt the money or credit owed by private households or private corporations based on the country under ...