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Liquidity stress testing
Liquidity stress testing

Report of the Commission on Inclusive Prosperity
Report of the Commission on Inclusive Prosperity

Financial Aspects of Recent Trends in the Global Economy
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... Thus, the goal of this book - Financial Aspects of the Recent Trends in the Global Economy (FINART) - is to encourage the exchange of new ideas about challenges in global trends in finance in the view of wide aspects of current financial and (public, corporate, households) debt crisis. The book cons ...
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... private capital flows to all developing countries in 1996.2In 1996, FDI to CEE and FSU, for example, was only $14 billion, equivalent to the total amount received by Malaysia and Mexico in that year. The distribution of FDI flows has also been highly uneven. Over the 1992-96 period, Russia and the V ...
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... Torbjörn Becker has been Director of the Stockholm Institute of Transition Economics at the Stockholm School of Economics since August 2006. He is also a board member of the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, chairman of the board of the Kyiv Economics Institute (Ukraine) and CenE ...
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... 3. It refers to the production of the country 3. It refers to the value of goods just in one year only accumulated in a country over the years. Economic Relationship between National Wealth and a Growing National Income National wealth consists of land, mineral reserves, factories, roads, buildings, ...
macro economics
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... channels that facilitate the cross-border effects, the consequences of the spillover effects, and the possible policies for mitigating such contagion. For the most part, the literature has focused on the contagion impact on liquidity conditions; cross-border exposures of financial intermediaries; th ...
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... national unemployment rate rose from 9.5% to 10.0%, which were levels that had not been experienced in the U.S. in over 25 years. From July through October 2012, when the most recent NFCS was in the field, the unemployment rate declined from 8.2% to 7.9%, still high by historical standards, but cons ...
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... workers sort into entrepreneurial firms in the presence of search frictions in the labor market and financial constraints for entrepreneurs. In the calibrated model’s equilibrium, individuals with high labor productivity and lower assets tend to sort into the entrepreneurial sector. The empirical f ...
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... to meet these margin calls.6 These asset sales had ramifications for other markets and other hedge funds. Mark Mitchell, Lasse Pedersen, and Todd Pulvino recount an example: “When LTCM incurred large losses on macroeconomic bets, the firm was forced to liquidate large convertible bond positions.7 Th ...
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... January job gains were down 31.7% year-over-year, all sectors posted gains over year-earlier levels— with the exception of mining and logging. In 2015, more than 1.7 million jobs were added in the 62 markets tracked by CBRE Econometric Advisors (CBRE EA), for an overall payrolls increase of 2.1%. Te ...
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... be identified by words such as “expects,” “intends,” “anticipates,” “plans,” “believes,” “seeks,” “targets,” “outlook,” “estimates,” “will,” “should,” “may” or words of similar meaning, but these words are not the exclusive means of identifying forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements ...
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S0311856_en.pdf

... year. In 2003, the countries of the region have been able to access funds at an average cost of 9.6%, which is 300 basis points less than 12 months earlier. Nevertheless, foreign investment has been on the decline. Latin America and the Caribbean have received nearly US$ 22 billion in compensatory f ...
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... Important questions are how to combine pay-as-you-go with prefunded pension benefits, and how to adjust benefits and taxes to unanticipated shocks. Traditional public pension systems set fixed benefit rates to be financed by fixed rates of payroll taxation. Economic shocks may require adjustments in ...
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Global saving glut

Global saving glut (also global savings glut, GSG, cash hoarding, dead cash, dead money, glut of excess intended saving, shortfall of investment intentions), describes a situation in which desired saving exceeds desired investment. By 2005 Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, the central bank of the United States, expressed concern about the ""significant increase in the global supply of saving"" and its implications for monetary policies, particularly in the United States. Although Bernanke's analyses focused on events in 2003 to 2007 that led to the 2007–2009 financial crisis, regarding GSG countries and the United States, excessive saving by the non-financial corporate sector (NFCS) is an ongoing phenomenon, affecting many countries. Bernanke's ""celebrated (if sometimes disputed)"" global saving glut (GSG) hypothesis argued that increased capital inflows to the United States from GSG countries were an important reason that U.S. longer-term interest rates from 2003 to 2007 were lower than expected.Alan Greenspan testifying at the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission in 2010 explained, ""Whether it was a glut of excess intended saving, or a shortfall of investment intentions, the result was the same: a fall in global real long-term interest rates and their associated capitalization rates. Asset prices, particularly house prices, in nearly two dozen countries accordingly moved dramatically higher. U.S. house price gains were high by historical standards but no more than average compared to other countries.""An 2007 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) report noted that the ""excess of gross saving over fixed investment (i.e. net lending) in the ""aggregate OECD corporate sector"" had been unusually large since 2002. In a 2006 International Monetary Fund report, it was observed that, ""since the bursting of the equity marketbubble in the early 2000s, companies in many industrial countries have moved from their traditional position of borrowing funds to finance their capital expenditures to running financial surpluses that they are now lending to other sectors of the economy."" David Wessell in a Wall Street Journal article observed that, ""[c]ompanies, which normally borrow other folks’ savings in order to invest, have turned thrifty. Even companies enjoying strong profits and cash flow are building cash hoards, reducing debt and buying back their own shares—instead of making investment bets."" Although the hypothesis of excess cash holdings or cash hoarding has been used by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the International Monetary Fund and the media Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the concept itself has been disputed and criticized as conceptually flawed in articles and reports published by the Hoover Institute, the Max-Planck Institute and the CATO Institute among others. Ben Bernanke used the phrase ""global savings glut"" in 2005 linking it to the U.S. current account deficit.In their July 2012 report Standard and Poors described the ""fragile equilibrium that currently exists in the global corporate credit landscape."" U.S. nonfinancial corporate sector NFCS firms continued to hoard a ""record amount of cash"" with large profitable investment-grade companies and technology and health care industries (with significant amounts of cash overseas), holding most of the wealth.By January 2013, NFCS firms in Europe had over 1 trillion euros of cash on their balance sheets, a record high in nominal terms.
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