Should the European Union renegotiate its debt obligations to adversarial nations?
A portion of national debt is held by foreign governments, including nations considered geopolitical rivals. Renegotiating debt obligations to these countries would involve changing the terms of repayment, which could have significant economic and diplomatic consequences. Proponents argue that renegotiating reduces economic leverage held by adversarial nations, protects national security interests, and reasserts fiscal sovereignty. Opponents argue that it could damage the country’s global credit rating, trigger financial instability, and undermine trust in the nation’s financial system.
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