Essays about: "Financial Soundness Indicators"
Found 4 essays containing the words Financial Soundness Indicators.
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1. Macroprudential Policy Activity and Financial Inclusion: Cross-country analysis of macroprudential tool use
University essay from Lunds universitet/Ekonomisk-historiska institutionenAbstract : Research suggests that multiple trade-offs and synergies characterise the relationship between financial inclusion and financial stability. For example, expanding access to financial services can lead to a more stable banking system but also excessive credit growth and decreased stability. READ MORE
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2. The Adverse Side-Effects of Negative Interest Rate Policies on Banking Stability
University essay from Lunds universitet/Nationalekonomiska institutionenAbstract : The purpose of this paper is to investigate banking stability in countries where Negative Interest Rate Policies (NIRPs) are implemented, then study this stability by examining the relationships between policy interest rates and indicators of not only banking profitability but also capital adequacy, asset quality, and liquidity. The dataset used are the Financial Soundness Indicators (FSIs) collected by the IMF, which are mainly used for measuring the economic stability among countries. READ MORE
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3. Banking risks and the risk of banking : A quantitative study on risk for banks using key indicators
University essay from Södertörns högskola/Institutionen för samhällsvetenskaperAbstract : The financial sector plays a key role in each country economic system. Banks tend to have the biggest influence in this sector and play a major role in a country's economic development and wealth. READ MORE
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4. Reassessing the Use of Aggregate Prudential Ratios to Identify Banking System Problems
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för nationalekonomiAbstract : Building on an early warning baseline model, this paper analyzes the application of macroprudential banking ratios for an economy's five largest financial institutions, constructed from balance-sheet data, on the probability of systemic banking crises occurring relative to the sector-wide aggregates that are commonly used by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other authorities. The investigation is motivated by the observation that the distribution of bank assets is highly asymmetric in advanced economies, the fact that an economy's largest banks are often implicated in systemic banking crises, as well as theory and empirical evidence demonstrating the large impact of shocks originating at large banks. READ MORE