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Titre : Sources of contagion : is it finance or trade? Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Caroline Van Rijckeghem, Auteur ; Beatrice Weder, Auteur Editeur : IMF Année de publication : October 1999 Collection : Working Paper num. 146 Importance : 28 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Crise économique et financière Tags : Crise financière Commerce mondial Finance international Banques Résumé : This paper presents evidence that spillovers through bank lending, as opposed to trade linkages and country characteristics, can help explain contagion. We construct a measure of competition for bank funds and find evidence in favor of a common lender effect in the Mexican, Thai, and Russian crises, after controlling for the degree of trade competition and macroeconomic fundamentals. The results are quite robust to the definition of the finance indicator. In the case of the Asian crisis, results are not always robust to the inclusion of trade competition, reflecting the high correlation between competition for funds and trade. En ligne : https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/1999/wp99146.pdf Sources of contagion : is it finance or trade? [document électronique] / Caroline Van Rijckeghem, Auteur ; Beatrice Weder, Auteur . - [S.l.] : IMF, October 1999 . - 28 p. - (Working Paper; 146) .
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Crise économique et financière Tags : Crise financière Commerce mondial Finance international Banques Résumé : This paper presents evidence that spillovers through bank lending, as opposed to trade linkages and country characteristics, can help explain contagion. We construct a measure of competition for bank funds and find evidence in favor of a common lender effect in the Mexican, Thai, and Russian crises, after controlling for the degree of trade competition and macroeconomic fundamentals. The results are quite robust to the definition of the finance indicator. In the case of the Asian crisis, results are not always robust to the inclusion of trade competition, reflecting the high correlation between competition for funds and trade. En ligne : https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/1999/wp99146.pdf Documents numériques
SSRN-id880673-min.pdfAdobe Acrobat PDF
Titre : The fire power of the financial lobby : A survey of the size of the financial lobby at the EU level Type de document : document électronique Editeur : Brussels : Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) Année de publication : April 2014 Importance : 24 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Europe
LobbyingTags : Finance international Lobbying UE Résumé : The enormous influence and destructive power of financial markets became apparent with the global economic collapse of 2008 which fuelled a financial crisis from which Europe has yet to recover. These events revealed the dire need for stronger rules on financial markets. But reform has proved difficult, not least due to successful campaigns waged by the financial lobby in the European Union: its “fire power” in resisting reforms it dislikes has been all too evident with issues such as banking regulation, derivatives, credit rating agencies, accountting rules, and many more.
Despite this manifest presence of “the financial lobby”, until now there has been no comprehensive survey of its size and power in the EU. This report is intended to fill that void.
The findings are stunning. In total the financial industry spends more than €120 million per year on lobbying in Brussels and employs more than 1700 lobbyists. The financial industry lobbied the post-crisis EU regulation via over 700 organisations and outnumbered civil-society organisations and trade unions by a factor of more than seven, with an even stronger dominance when numbers of staff and lobbying expenses are taken into account. In sum the financial lobby is massively outspending other (public) interests in terms of EU lobbying, by a factor of more than 30.En ligne : http://corporateeurope.org/financial-lobby/2014/04/fire-power-financial-lobby The fire power of the financial lobby : A survey of the size of the financial lobby at the EU level [document électronique] . - Brussels : Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO), April 2014 . - 24 p.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Europe
LobbyingTags : Finance international Lobbying UE Résumé : The enormous influence and destructive power of financial markets became apparent with the global economic collapse of 2008 which fuelled a financial crisis from which Europe has yet to recover. These events revealed the dire need for stronger rules on financial markets. But reform has proved difficult, not least due to successful campaigns waged by the financial lobby in the European Union: its “fire power” in resisting reforms it dislikes has been all too evident with issues such as banking regulation, derivatives, credit rating agencies, accountting rules, and many more.
Despite this manifest presence of “the financial lobby”, until now there has been no comprehensive survey of its size and power in the EU. This report is intended to fill that void.
The findings are stunning. In total the financial industry spends more than €120 million per year on lobbying in Brussels and employs more than 1700 lobbyists. The financial industry lobbied the post-crisis EU regulation via over 700 organisations and outnumbered civil-society organisations and trade unions by a factor of more than seven, with an even stronger dominance when numbers of staff and lobbying expenses are taken into account. In sum the financial lobby is massively outspending other (public) interests in terms of EU lobbying, by a factor of more than 30.En ligne : http://corporateeurope.org/financial-lobby/2014/04/fire-power-financial-lobby Documents numériques
financial_lobby_report.pdfAdobe Acrobat PDF