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Items 3141 to 3150 of 3172

The determinants of banking crises : evidence from developing and developed countries
Asl Demirguc-Kunt; Enrica Detragiache / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
In the 1980s and early 1990s several countries experienced severe banking crises. This study attempts to identify which features of the economic environment tend to breed banking sector problems by econometrically estimating the proba...
Do central banks need capital?
Peter Stella / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
Do tax rates encourage entrepreneurial activity?
Roger H. Gordon / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
Effects of the European economic and monetary union (EMU) on taxation and interest spending of national governments
Francesco P Mongelli / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
The Egyptian stabilization experience : an analytical retrospective
Arvind Subramanian / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
This paper analyzes the successful Egyptian stabilization experience during the 1990s, focusing on its distinctive features and contrasting them with the recent experiences of other developing countries that undertook adjustment. The ...
Estimating the equilibrium real exchange rate : an application to Finland
Tarhan N. Feyzioglu / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
Exchange rate volatility, pricing to market and trade smoothing
Peter B. Clark; Hamid Faruqee / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
Explaining and forecasting the velocity of money in transition economies : with special reference to the Baltics, Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union
Mark de. Broeck; Kornelia Krajnyak; Henri Lorie / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
Exchange rate-based stabilization in Western Europe : Greece, Ireland, Italy and Portugal
Enrica Detragiache; A. Javier Hamann / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
Fiscal policy and the predictability of exchange rate collapse
Betty C Daniel / International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997
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Items 3141 to 3068 of 3068

Expanding microfinance in Latin America’s rural areas
M. Jaramillo / Evidence and Lessons from Latin America, 2013
Rural finance has the potential to help poor people out of poverty, and Latin America has met that challenge in some unique ways.This Brief by discusses impacts of microfinance’s in rural areas, presenting evidence on rural pove...
Latin America's institutional and regulatory innovations for microfinance growth
M. Jaramillo / Evidence and Lessons from Latin America, 2013
Current microfinance sector performance is associated with the reforms of Latin American countries’ financial sectors that started at the end of the 1980s. Before the reforms, development of microfinance was constrained by an ov...
Guide to microfinance in Latin America
M. Jaramillo / Evidence and Lessons from Latin America, 2013
There are some unique features of Latin America’s recent microfinance evolution, including innovations in regulations and technology, that may provide interesting lessons for other regions. Key lessons: ...
Final Impact Evaluation of the Saving for Change Program in Mali, 2009-2012
2013
Saving for Change (SfC) is a community savings group programme designed and implemented by Oxfam America, Freedom from Hunger, and the Strømme Foundation. SfC operates in 13 countries in West Africa, Latin America and Asia. ...
How best to measure pension adequacy
A.G. Grech / Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion, Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economic and R, 2013
Though the main benchmark used to assess pension reforms continues to be the expected resulting fall in future government spending, the impact of policy changes on pension adequacy is increasingly coming to the for...
What next for the BRICS Bank?
N. Watson; M. Younis; S. Spratt / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2013
A new development bank to be created by the ‘Rising Powers’ of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) is intended to promote greater cooperation between developing countries, and address what is seen by many...
Asian development outlook 2013: Asia’s energy challenge
Asian Development Bank, 2013
The Asian Development Outlook 2013 provides a comprehensive economic analysis at both regional- and country-levels. It begins by outlining the economic status of the region before examining the goals, challenges and strategies of stak...
Unburnable carbon 2013: wasted capital and stranded assets
London School of Economics, 2013
According to this report, despite fossil fuel reserves already far exceeding the carbon budget to avoid global warming of more than two degrees Celsius, US$674 billion was spent in 2012 finding and developing new potentially stranded ...
Papua New Guinea has strong economic growth yet marginalised remote areas
M.E. Khan; Y. Niimi; M.R.M. Cham / Asian Development Bank, 2012
Papua New Guinea (PNG) has enjoyed several years of strong economic growth, driven largely by high commodity prices and supported by structural reforms and some sound macroeconomic policies. However, the growing opportunities and weal...
Framework for assessing the effectiveness of national institutions to deliver climate finance
N. Bird; H. Tilley; N. C. Trujillo / Overseas Development Institute, 2013
This paper presents a framework for measuring the effectiveness of national systems that deliver public climate finance; an approach that incorporates the policy environment, institutional architecture and the public financial system ...
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Department of Economics, Strathclyde University
University department. Research interests in the Department are wide-ranging, with particular emphasis on Applied Microeconomics, Applied Econometrics, Regional Economics and Energy Economics.
Development bank of Latin America
Secretaría General Iberoamericana (SEGIB)
SEGIB is an Inter-governmental organisation for the provision of institutional and technical support to the Iberoamerican Conference and the Iberoamerican Summit Meeting of Heads of State and Heads of Government. SEGIB has member countries in Latin America and  the Iberian Peninsula - Spain, Portugal and Andorra.
International Emissions Trading Association (IETA)
The International Emissions Trading Association (IETA) is a non-profit business organisation created in June 1999 to establish a functional international framework for trading in greenhouse gas emission reductions.
Africa Progress Panel
The Africa Progress Panel consists of a group of individuals who lend their time to track and encourage progress in Africa, and to underscore shared responsibility between African leaders and their international partners for sustaining it. A Geneva-based Secretariat supports the Panel in three main areas: research and policy; advocacy and communication; and preparation of APP core produ...
Jubilee South Asia Pacific Movement on Debt and Development (JSAPMDD)
Jubilee South Asia Pacific Movement on Debt and Development (JSAPMDD) is a regional alliance of peoples’ movements, community organisations, coalitions, NGOs and networks.
International Growth Centre (IGC)
The International Growth Centre (IGC) aims to promote sustainable growth in developing countries by providing demand-led policy advice based on frontier research. Based at LSE and in partnership with Oxford University, the IGC is initiated and funded by DFID. The IGC has 13 active country programmes in 12 countries (Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Ghana, India (Bihar state and Central), Mozambiqu...
University of Western Australia
Frankfurt School - UNEP Collaborating Centre for Climate & Sustainable Energy Finance (FS UNEP)
Frankfurt School  – UNEP Collaborating Centre for Climate & Sustainable Energy Finance is a strategic cooperation between the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Frankfurt School of Finance & Management (Frankfurt School).
Long-Run Economic Perspectives of an Ageing Society (LEPAS)
The EU member countries will be increasingly populated by older people. Nearly 25 percent of people in the European Union in 2030 can be above age 65, up from about 17 percent in 2005. Europe's old-age dependency ratio (the number of people age 65 and older compared with the number of working-age people ages 15-64) could more than double by 2050, from one in every four to fewer than one in every t...
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