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		Timeline: The Bolsheviks to Putin: a history of Russian defaults
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  [June 01, 2022] By 
		Jorgelina do Rosario 
 LONDON (Reuters) - In 1918, Soviet 
		revolutionary Leon Trotsky told Western creditors aghast at the 
		Bolsheviks' repudiation of Russia's external debt: "Gentlemen, you were 
		warned."
 
 He reminded them that dismissal of Tsarist-era debt had been a key 
		manifesto of the failed uprising in 1905. More than a century later, 
		Russia stands on the brink of another default but this time there was no 
		warning.
 
 Few expected the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine to elicit such a 
		ferocious response from the West, which has all but severed Russia from 
		global financial and payment systems.
 
 These are Russia's major debt events over the past century:
 
 1918: REPUDIATION
 
 Just before the 1917 revolution, Russia was the world's largest net 
		international debtor, having borrowed heavily to finance 
		industrialisation and railways.
 
 But seeing the Tsarist industrialisation drive as failing the working 
		class, the Bolsheviks repudiated all foreign debt.
 
 
		
		 
		"They said 'we are not paying and even if we could, we wouldn't pay.' 
		And that was a political statement," said Hassan Malik, senior sovereign 
		analyst at Loomis Sayles and the author of the book "Bankers and 
		Bolsheviks: International Finance and the Russian Revolution".
 
 Despite Trotsky's reminder, the default shocked the world, especially 
		France, whose banks and citizens suffered massive losses.
 
 "Investors didn't take it seriously because they thought it would be so 
		self-harmful," Malik said, estimating the debt to be worth at least $500 
		billion at 2020 prices and possibly more.
 
 It took until the mid-1980s for Moscow to recognise some of that debt.
 
 1991: USSR TO RUSSIA
 
 Following the break-up of the USSR in 1991, Russia stopped servicing 
		part of the overseas debt it inherited from former Soviet states.
 
 Andrey Vavilov, Russia's deputy finance minister between 1994 and 1997, 
		said the Russian Federation held around $105 billion in Soviet-era debt 
		at the end of 1992, with its own debt amounting to $2.8 billion.
 
 For accepting the inherited debt, the Paris Club recognised Russia as a 
		creditor nation, Vavilov wrote in his book "The Russian Public Debt and 
		Financial Meltdowns". And as Russia agreed with the group of nations to 
		restructure $28 billion in debt in 1996, it was allowed to shift major 
		Soviet-era debt payments to the next decade.
 
 But with a financial crisis around the corner, it would take until 2017 
		to clear the Communist-era arrears.
 
 
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			Vehicles travel along the embankment of the Moskva River during 
			sunset, as the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour is seen in the 
			background, in Moscow, Russia October 25, 2021. REUTERS/Shamil 
			Zhumatov 
            
			
			
			 
            1998: ROUBLE DEBT DEFAULT 
 By 1997, crashing oil prices slashed Russian export revenues. 
			External debt, which stood near 50% of GDP in 1995, had swelled by 
			1998 to 77%, according to Vavilov, who blamed hefty IMF/World Bank 
			loans for contributing to the pile.
 
 Russia raised very little tax revenue and relied on short-term 
			Treasury bills known as GKO to cover expenditure. But it found it 
			harder and harder to roll these over and was soon spending 
			ever-increasing amounts to defend the rouble.
 
 "The more the government insisted that it would stand by the 
			currency and repay its debts, the more investors concluded it was 
			time to sell," said Chris Miller in his book "Putinomics: Power and 
			Money in Resurgent Russia".
 
 A month before the default, the IMF put together a $22.6 billion aid 
			package, but "the market was expecting the announcement of an 
			additional $20 billion," Martin Gilman, the IMF representative in 
			Moscow at the time, wrote in his book "No Precedent, No Plan: Inside 
			Russia's 1998 Default".
 
 On Aug. 17, 1998, Russia threw in the towel, devaluing the rouble, 
			announcing it could no longer pay rouble debt and introducing a 
			three-month moratorium on some external debt.
 
 Russian banks that had invested heavily in T-bills and had extensive 
			foreign currency exposure soon went under.
 
 2022: A FORCED DEFAULT
 
 Through dire financial straits in 1998, Moscow made sure to continue 
			Eurobond payments. Now it has plenty of cash but may not dodge 
			default.
 
 To sidestep sanctions, the Kremlin is suggesting foreign creditors 
			open Russian bank accounts to receive payments in alternative 
			currencies to the dollar.
 
            
			 
			Non-U.S. investors can in theory agree, but U.S. bondholders cannot, 
			after a U.S. Treasury licence allowing them to accept Russian 
			payments expired in May.
 Miller, author of "Putinomics", said Russia would fight tooth and 
			nail to dodge a Eurobond default.
 
 "The officials on the central bank and the finance ministry have 
			built their careers on restabilising Russia as a creditor that can 
			be trusted in international markets," he said.
 
 "It's built into their identity to make sure a default doesn’t 
			happen again."
 
 (Reporting by Jorgelina do Rosario, editing by Sujata Rao and Nick 
			Macfie)
 
            
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