Abstract
The aim of this article is to explore the strategies European government debt managers used in response to the growing demand for credit by governments since the 1980s and how the introduction of the common currency area influenced the nature of government debt management. The analysis indicated that in the 1980s, a paradigm shift emerged as bilateral debt relationships became negligible, while the role of financial market principles became much stronger. A financialization of the relationship with private investors took place, although still highly regulated. The introduction of the euro resulted not only in the new European rules but also in the financialization of the regulatory framework. The participating governments lost the privilege to encapsulate their markets. Because of these two processes, managing government debt in the common currency area meant developing a strategy to successfully issue in a transnational market without support from public authorities at least until the crisis.
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