The history of the global economy is not written in gold or trade routes alone; it is written in the ledgers of debt. At its core, fiscal sustainability the ability of a government to maintain its long-term spending and debt obligations without going bankrupt is the invisible thread that connects the stability of a 19th-century empire to the volatility of a modern emerging market. When that thread snaps, the resulting chaos reshapes international relations, empowers global institutions, and creates a playground for the financial Escape Artists who profit from the wreckage.
Historically, the relationship between a debtor and a creditor was defined by physical power. In the 1800s, sovereign debt was a matter of national honor and military might. If a country defaulted, it didn’t just face a lower credit rating; it faced an invasion. This was the era of “Gunboat Diplomacy.
A defining moment occurred in 1902, when Venezuela defaulted on its European debts. In response, Britain, Germany, and Italy launched a naval blockade, sinking Venezuelan ships and shelling coastal fortifications. This event was so pivotal that it led to the Drago Doctrine, a precursor to modern international law, which argued that no foreign power should use force against an American nation to collect a public debt.
As the 20th century progressed, the enforcement of debt moved from the battlefield to the boardroom. After World War II, the Bretton Woods Conference established the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The goal was to replace naval blockades with a “Lender of Last Resort.” However, this shift didn’t eliminate the power imbalance it simply changed the currency of influence. Debt became a tool of geopolitical alignment, used during the Cold War to keep developing nations within the orbit of either the United States or the Soviet Union.
Today, fiscal sustainability is managed by a complex web of international organizations that act as the “financial police.” The IMF and the World Bank are the primary actors, but their role is often controversial. When a country faces a debt crisis, the IMF provides the liquidity needed to prevent a total collapse. In exchange, they demand “Conditionality”—structural adjustment programs that require the country to cut public spending, privatize state industries, and raise taxes.
While these measures are designed to restore fiscal health, they often have a devastating human cost. In international relations, this creates a “sovereignty gap.” When a government must choose between feeding its citizens and paying back foreign bondholders to satisfy IMF requirements, it often leads to political instability. We see this cycle repeating today in nations like Argentina, which has defaulted nine times in its history, and Sri Lanka, where debt-fueled inflation led to a popular uprising in 2022.
Furthermore, the rise of the G20 Common Framework reflects a shift in the global hierarchy. For decades, the Paris Club (mostly Western creditors) dictated terms. Now, with China becoming the world’s largest bilateral creditor, debt negotiations have become a proxy for the broader struggle for global hegemony.
In the 21st century, debt has become a primary instrument of international relations. The concept of “Debt-Trap Diplomacy” has dominated discussions regarding China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). By lending billions for massive infrastructure projects in developing nations ports in Sri Lanka, railways in Kenya, mines in Zambia—critics argue that creditors can gain strategic leverage over a country’s physical territory and foreign policy.
Whether intentional or not, these debt burdens redefine the concept of sustainability. A nation is only fiscally sustainable if it can grow faster than its interest rates. When high-interest debt is funneled into projects that don’t generate immediate revenue, the country becomes trapped in a “repayment loop,” effectively surrendering its economic autonomy to its creditors.
Within this system, a specialized group of actors has mastered the art of “escaping” the traditional rules of finance. These “Escape Artists” operate in the shadows of international law, often making the path to fiscal sustainability impossible for struggling nations.
1.Vulture Funds: These are private hedge funds that specialize in “distressed debt.” When a country like Argentina or Greece is on the verge of default, these funds buy up the country’s bonds for pennies on the dollar. While other creditors might agree to a “haircut” (accepting less than they are owed to help the country recover), vulture funds refuse. They use aggressive litigation in New York or London courts to sue for the full face value, plus interest. They are the ultimate escape artists, bypassing the collective spirit of international restructuring to extract massive profits from bankrupt states.
2.The Great Capital Flight: Fiscal sustainability is destroyed when the tax base disappears. In many high-debt nations, the political and business elites are the first to “escape.” Using tax havens and offshore shells, they move their wealth out of the country before a currency devaluation hits. This leaves the domestic middle class and the poor to shoulder the entire burden of the national debt.
3.Inflation as an Escape Hatch: Sometimes, it is the government itself that acts as the escape artist. Through financial repression, a government can keep interest rates lower than the rate of inflation. This allows them to pay back their debt in “cheaper” currency. While this makes the debt look more sustainable on paper, it effectively acts as a hidden tax on everyone who holds the national currency, wiping out the savings of the populace.
The link between debt, history, and international relations reveals a stark reality: fiscal sustainability is rarely just a technical accounting problem. It is a struggle for power. History shows that when debt becomes unsustainable, the resulting “fix” usually involves a transfer of wealth or sovereignty.
Today, the global economy stands at a crossroads. As interest rates remain high and geopolitical tensions rise, the world’s poorest nations are spending more on debt service than on health and education combined. To break this cycle, the international community must address the “Escape Artists” who profit from dysfunction and create a system where sustainability is measured not just by a debt-to-GDP ratio, but by the stability and well-being of the people within those borders.


