Abstract

ABSTRACTThe side effects of the Global South’s 1980s debt crisis on the Council of Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA) member countries have received scant scholarly attention, even though the members were important trading partners for many developing countries. This paper focuses on the reaction of the East by looking at internal documents from CMEA meetings. It is argued that the crisis of the South aggravated the already pending crisis of the Eastern economies. The CMEA countries reacted by taking on more risks in doing business with the South and trying to secure the debt repayments by adopting Western financial practices.

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