...VICTORIOUS TEAM Countries For The Project for the Period 2011 : 1] China 2] India 3] USA Team Members and Students IDS : Nikita Bhivate A2604 ( U.S.A.) Li Jianwei A2394 ( China ) Tingting Hao A2319 ( India ) MBA 531 International Financial Management. Prof. Jayant Kanitkar. INTRODUCTION : Introduction Of China : During the period from 2007 to 2011, the whole world has been suffering from global economic recession and financial crisis. From US subprime to EU sovereign debt crisis, China, as the second largest economy in the world, experienced internal and external economic impacts. In the year of 2007, China’s economic development reached its pick. With the expectation of CNY appreciation, hot money flooded into China. As a result of this, the price of investment asset surged up sharply. The housing price tripled, and the Shanghai stock index reached to a historical level of 6300 from less than 3000 with in one year. The wealth effect from the high investment asset price stimulated consumption. Moreover, China was keeping its high net exports trading volume and fixed asset investment. The GDP growth rate exceeded 10%. However, the financial bubble broke in the US, and a chain reaction directly affected China. In 2008, all economic indictors shown that China’s development slowed down. Stock market can be regarded as the forecaster of economic. The Shanghai stock index dropped to 1900 from 6300. Affected by recession in international...
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...Financial Crisis Will Not Deepen Further Financial crisis occurs when the value of financial institution or asset price drops quickly. (Investopedia US, 2013) Today the world financial system is undergoing economic recession. It is assumed to have begun in the year 2007-2008. After the great depression US economy suffered a short term recession in 2001 but came out with it adequately. It also wide stood dotcom bubble bust, attack by terrorists and accounting scandals. Federal government decreased it rate 11 times from 6.5 in 2000 to 1.7% from the year 2000 in order to increase its liquidity in the economy. A man with no job, no income and no asset was able to afford a house mortgage. This rate was decreased to 1% in June 2003. In 2004 country’s elite banks like Lehman brother, Goldman sacs, Merrill lynch, Morgan & Stanley were relaxed with the net capital requirement 30-40 times. (Sivakumar and Krishnaswami, 2012)But after saturation point problem started rising with the rising interest rates. In 2007 it turned out to be a bad new when federal fund rate reached 5.25% in 2006. Many banks got erupted and with shortage of money. Central banks in several countries like UK, Europe central, Sweden, Canada, Switzerland, china etc help in adding world economy but failed. This economic crisis also exploded the economies of Arab nations, Japan, UK, Ireland, Greece, China etc. The consequences faced by these countries in the meltdown were low GDP, high inflation, low deflation, volatile...
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...Table of content I. Introduction to credit crisis and Bank CEO Incentives…………………….2 II. Other factors of credit crisis………………………………………………3-4 a) Housing bubble b) Interest rate and inflation c) Unemployment III. Conclusion…………………………………………………………………..5 IV. References……………………………………………………………………6 In my following essay, I will try to explain clearly about credit crisis and Incеntivеs оf Bаnk Chiеf Exеcutive officеrs are nоt mаjоr fаctоr in crеdit slump. At first, lets to еxplаin what are сredit сrisis and its rоle in еcоnоmy. Making a hard to obtain financing to debtors by shortening of funds in the credit market is called as credit crisis. It is because of limited assets obtainable for lending and the price for assets for borrowing are increases so fast. Creditors don’t want or can not to lend an asset again, because they meet to losses on previous loans. This is caused by non-payment by debtors and defaults on loans, which decreases their value. In this situation, banks are trying to recover expenses and to return all money that they lost by selling debt. Then, if prices fall, the bank suffers losses. They cannot borrow a huge amount of funds if capital reduces. Also, if the banks take on more risk in the market, they will increase interest rates on loans to reward for this risk. It will bring to increasing the price of borrowing, but also will bring to decreasing the borrowers. In general, reducing the liquidity of capital and reducing...
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...Declaration of Independence, 1776, [Online]). Although the circumstance in which it arose differed considerably, when coupled with the current financial crisis and its revelations of unethical practices, it is filled with irony. It is in this context that the report will adopt the position of internationl mandatory regulation as opposed to the voluntary option. For these ends it will employ several actors such as the Global Compact in order to demonstrate the organisations who are leading the way in Corporate Social Responsibility. However, as the report will show, due to its predatory nature, financial sector requires more than voluntary organisations. The crux of the argument is that regulation needs to be international due to the interconnectedness and interdependence caused by globalisation, and it needs to be mandatory due to the predatory nature of the financial system. Introduction: In light of the 2008 financial crisis, this report will argue for international mandatory regulations in the financial sector to enhance its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). The banks for International Settlement and the Basel Committee have made positive steps to enhance understanding of key supervisory issues and improve the quality of banking supervision worldwide (Banks for International Settlement , 2012, [Online]). However, the crisis of 2008 and its devastating effects, not only showed that more effective mandatory regulation needs to be applied to control a predatory industry...
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...facing the world today, from the present financial crisis to the change in the world’s climate. A financial crisis is applied broadly to a variety of situations in which some financial institutions or assets suddenly lose a large part of their value (Wikipedia, 2009). Climate change, on the other hand, is described as the buildup of man-made gases in the atmosphere that trap the sun’s heat, causing changes in weather patterns on a global scale (Enviro- glossary). Larger countries are not the only ones that have been affected by these two issues, as smaller islands have also been affected. One such country is the small island state of Grenada. Developing countries and developed countries are all inter-connected, in that, any effect whether positive or negative on the economies developed countries affects the economy of developing countries. The first and second world countries have felt the ‘thump’ of the global financial crisis which have caused an increase in the rate of unemployment, decrease in consumer demand and spending and investments into developing markets. “The current global financial crisis is having an adverse impact on our country and on the performance of its economy” (Hon Tillman Thomas, 2009). The financial crisis has forced the Grenadian government to focus on ways to boost the economy from within, spending excessive amounts of money on stimulation packages for the economy. Unfortunately, because of this same crisis, investors have withdrawn their funds...
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...[pic] [pic] Assignment Course code: ECON 403 Course title: Monetary Theory and Policy Lecturer: Asst. Prof. Dr. Hasan Gungor Student: Murad Alakbarov Student number: 065028 Task for Assignment II: Compare and contrast 1929 – 39 Great Depression and current global economic crisis with respect to causes and responses and actions of monetary authorities to this crisis. Introduction “…In the old days, we used to suffer nearly periodic economic crises, the sudden onset of which was called a "panic", and the lingering trough period after the panic was called "depression". The most famous depression in modern times, of course, was the one that began in a typical financial panic in 1929 and lasted until the advent of World War II. After the disaster of 1929, economists and politicians resolved that this must never happen again. The easiest way of succeeding at this resolve was, simply to define "depressions" out of existence. From that point on, America was to suffer no further depressions. For when the next sharp depression came along, in 1937-38, the economists simply refused to use the dread name, and came up with a new, much softer-sounding word: "recession". From that point on, we have been through quite a few recessions, but not a single depression. But pretty soon the word "recession" also became too harsh for the delicate sensibilities of the American public. It now seems that we had our last recession in 1957-58. For since...
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...Global Financial Crisis Impact and Challenges Shaikh Faisal. Assistant Professor Dr. Rafiq Zakaria Campus Millennium Institute of Management Aurangabad Introduction: The global financial system has undergone a period of unprecedented turmoil. Market confidence dwindled and has remained fragile, leading to the collapse or near-collapse of large, and in some cases systemically important, financial institutions, and calling forth public intervention in the financial system on a scale not seen for decades. The financial system has been severely weakened by mounting losses on impaired and illiquid assets, uncertainty regarding the availability and cost of funding, and further deterioration of loan portfolios as global economic growth slows. Finding a purely private sector resolution of financial market strains has become increasingly difficult, while case-by-case intervention by authorities has not alleviated market concerns. In response, more comprehensive approaches are now being considered or implemented to bring about a more orderly process of deleveraging and to break the adverse feedback loop between the financial system and the global economy. Such a comprehensive approach—if well coordinated among countries—should be sufficient to restore confidence and the proper functioning of markets and avert a more protracted downturn in the global economy. Significant writedowns have already been realized, but more may lie ahead. . . The estimate of aggregate write downs...
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...Republic of Korea The global economy suffered its greatest collapse since World War II between the end of 2008 and beginning of 2009. International trade declined right alongside this collapse with the WTO reporting that the global economic crisis sparked a 12.2% fall in the volume of global trade and a 2.5% reduction in world GDP. Economists around the world have come to the consensus that the trade collapse was caused by the contraction of global demand, although there are factors on the supply side that played a role as well. Commodity prices tumbled as the price bubble burst in 2008. This along with shrinking demand sent the value and volume of commodities trade down. The production and exports of manufacturing collapsed as consumers and firms waited out the initial shock of the downturn. This poses the question if the trade drop was demand driven, why was the trade drop so much larger than the GDP drop? Richard Baldwin answers this question by explaining that the demand shock interacted with “compositional” and “synchronicity” effects to heighten the trade-to-GDP ratio. The compositional effect outlines the differences between “postponeable”, consumer durable and investment goods and highlights a special role of postponeable goods in generating volatility of trade flow. Postponeable goods are goods that are produced at the last possible moment or built to order. They occupy a larger portion of the world trade rather than the world GDP. A sudden drop in the demand for...
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...the economic crisis? Loh Hu 2/18/2013 In this paper, I examine how the theory of technological innovation waves could contribute to solving the ongoing economic crisis. Primarily, my stance remains that innovation in itself is insufficient to solve the economic crisis unless there exists a matching techno-economic paradigm where national, supranational and global efforts are coordinated for a full deployment of technological revolution. Can innovation solve the economic crisis? Background There has been a wide international debate on the causes and possible solutions to the economic crisis that emerged in 2007 – 2008 (Ranga and Etzkowitz 2012). The economic crisis sweeps across the global financial system rapidly and furiously as markets are globally integrated (Gore 2010). Hence, the responses to the global economic crisis are not only enclosed within a nation’s or a coalition government’s approach. Rather, a global coordinated response is warranted as well. Economic stimulus packages addressing short-term and long-term problems have been adopted in most countries as well as the European Commission (Ranga and Etzkowitz 2012). Internationally, the United States of America and European Union have recently been discussing on a free-trade agreement to remove trading barriers between the two important economic powers and boost the economies (BBC News Business 2013). Globally, the G-20 group of major economies have considered proposals on international financial regulation...
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...Employment Sector Employment Working Paper No. 74 2011 Global economic crisis, gender and employment: The impact and policy response Naoko Otobe Employment Sector Copyright © International Labour Organization First published 2011 Publications of the International Labour Office enjoy copyright under Protocol 2 of the Universal Copyright Convention. Nevertheless, short excerpts from them may be reproduced without authorization, on condition that the source is indicated. For rights of reproduction or translation, application should be made to ILO Publications (Rights and Permissions), International Labour Office, CH-1211 Geneva 22, Switzerland, or by email: pubdroit@ilo.org. The International Labour Office welcomes such applications. Libraries, institutions and other users registered with reproduction rights organizations may make copies in accordance with the licences issued to them for this purpose. Visit www.ifrro.org to find the reproduction rights organization in your country. Otobe, Naoko Global economic crisis, gender and employment : the impact and policy response / Naoko Otobe ; International Labour Office, Employment Sector. - Geneva: ILO, 2011 1 v. (Employment working paper) ISBN: 9789221241690; 9789221241706 (web pdf) ISSN 1999-2939 (print); ISSN 1999-2947 (web pdf) International Labour Office; Employment Sector women workers / men workers / employment / unemployment / gender equality / employment policy / social policy / economic recession / developed...
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...Financial Crisis By Hisham Al Rawashdeh Under supervision of PhD Muna Al Muallah Financial Management Petra University Jan 2016 Table of contents:- • Definition • Types of Financial crisis • Financial Crisis Causes • Theories • Financial Crisis of 2008 • Implications of Financial Crisis of 2008 on the emerging market. • Next Financial Crisis. • References Definition The term financial crisis is applied broadly to a variety of situations in which some financial assets suddenly lose a large part of their nominal value. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, many financial crises were associated with banking panics, and many recessions coincided with these panics. Other situations that are often called financial crises include stock market crashes and the bursting of other financial bubbles, currency crises, and sovereign defaults. Financial crises directly result in a loss of paper wealth but do not necessarily result in changes in the real economy. Financial crisis and Economic Crisis • Financial Crisis usually occurs in specific sectors, unlike the economic crisis which affect the entire economy. • If left unchecked, the financial crisis implications can lead to an economic crisis. In early 2008, many felt that this financial crisis would be limited to the banking sector and the housing market. However, the shortage of credit has had a very powerful impact on the real economy. Because banks are not lending, investment...
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...Counteracting the global economic crisis: values, institutions, policies. When talking about the broad and complicated subject of economic crisis, it is important to mention ideas concerning neutralization of its consequences and prevention of future calamities. The current disturbance in the global economy requires not only to understand how it was initiated, but also how to counteract and draw conclusions from it. The Chinese proverb says: “may you live in interesting times.” These times are now- financial markets are in turmoil, China is rising as economic power, young people from Europe and America are protesting against, what they see as ineffective government and regulations. In next years the world will change even more- also thanks to changes, that will be made as an answer to the global economic crisis- in terms of values, necessary institutions and policies. The first step toward ending the crisis is to introduce new regulations, that would stabilize the market. Since 1980’s the American financial market has been experiencing a long period of deregulation. Although the obvious results of this move- the example can be the deregulation of savings and loans companies, that led to crisis in 1989, the process continued. Decade later, in 1990’s the new market instruments- derivatives, became increasingly popular. Although, their allies argued that they would stabilize the market, the opposite happened. Any attempt to regulate hedge funds was cut out by Commodity...
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...Argentina’s 1980-1982 Banking Crisis In Argentina’s crisis of 1980’s financial institutions were forced to rely heavily on Central Bank financial assistance when they encountered deposit withdrawals. The largest investment bank and the second largest commercial bank failed. More than 70 institutions had to be liquidated or placed in intervention between 1980 and 1982. Bank Runs: After Mexican Peso Crisis, foreign investors’ feared Argentina with a weakening economy would devalue its currency, initiated a capital flight. As a result, lower wages, lower salaries, and high unemployment rates began to rise. Widespread fear of a financial meltdown triggered Bank Runs. Suspension of Payments: Banks, suspended payments denying the ability to withdraw funds. Debt for Deposit Swap: The government offered government bonds swap for deposits with few takers. Deposit Insurance: The Central Bank established a deposit-insurance program to rebuild confidence. Bank Nationalization and Restructuring: The Central Bank closed some banks, and nationalized others. The 1982-86 Banking Crisis in Chile Reaction Phase Toxic Assets Removal: Banks were assessed for their long-term viability. Viable banks sold ‘bad loans’ to the Central Bank, with a repurchase agreement. Most banks used this facility to the tune of $5 billion. Liquidity Enhancement Central Bank’s Secured and subsidized Loans on Collateral: Government provided secured loans (using bank assets as collateral)...
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...Sample Article: The Financial Crisis in Spain Summary Unemployment in Spain has reached 17.4 percent, according to figures released April 24 by the National Statistics Institute. Even without the global recession, Spain's economy likely would be going through a rough patch now due to the country's overheated housing market; with the recession, it is also suffering from a banking crisis and an industrial slump. Analysis Spain's unemployment rate rose from 13.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008 to 17.4 percent in the first quarter of 2009, increasing the ranks of the unemployed to more than 4 million, according to National Statistics Institute (INE) figures released on April 24. Spanish Economy Minister Elena Salgado said that the first quarter of 2009 will be the worst in terms of increasing unemployment. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicts that unemployment in Spain will reach 17.7 percent in 2009 and 19.3 percent in 2010, but the INE figures seem to indicate that unemployment could exceed 20 percent by the end of 2009. Of all the European countries, Spain has in many ways been one of the most gravely affected by the global economic crisis. Even without the global recession, Spain would most likely be undergoing a correction this year due to its extremely overheated housing market. But it is facing a severe housing market correction, an industrial slump, and a banking crisis caused by the housing correction and the recession's overall effects -- simultaneously...
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...| INDIA AND SUBPRIME CRISIS | | INDIA AND SUB-PRIME CRISIS Sub-prime, as the word suggests, is something that is not prime. In the Sub-prime crisis context it simply means lending money to Sub-prime borrowers i.e. lending to people with low or poor credit worthiness. Sub-prime crisis was caused because the lending norms in the USA were very lax. It is joked about in the academic circles that any man who was not on a respirator was given a loan without any regard to his or her creditworthiness. This was brought about by the “Spend yourself out of the post dot com bust recession” policy of the American government at that time. The end result of the Sub-prime crisis is manifesting itself in myriad ways. There are direct and indirect implications not only for the United States but for the entire world. The Sub-prime that was brought upon by the American financial system upon itself is spreading its tentacles around the world. People who were not even remotely connected with the Sub-prime crisis are being adversely affected. National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is the official agency in charge of declaring that the economy is in a state of recession. They define recession as: “significant decline in economic activity lasting more than a few months, which is normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales”. BUSINESS CYCLE The term business cycle (or economic cycle)...
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