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Market Discipline and Conflicts of Interest Between Banks and Pension Funds
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 44

Market Discipline and Conflicts of Interest Between Banks and Pension Funds

We study the behavior of private pension funds as large depositors in a banking system. Using panel data analysis, we examine whether, and if so how, pension funds influence market discipline in Argentina in the period 1998-2001. We find evidence that pension funds exert market discipline and this discipline gets stronger as the share of pension fund deposits in a bank rises. However, conflicts of interest undermine the disciplining role of pension funds. Specifically, pension funds allocate deposits to banks with weak fundamentals that own pension fund management companies. We conclude that forbidding banks' ownership of companies involved in pension fund management can enhance market discipline.

Bank Capital and Lending: An Extended Framework and Evidence of Nonlinearity
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 42

Bank Capital and Lending: An Extended Framework and Evidence of Nonlinearity

This paper studies the transmission of bank capital shocks to loan supply in Indonesia. A series of theoretically founded dynamic panel data models are estimated and find nonlinear effects of capital on loan growth: the response of weaker banks to changes in their capital positions is larger than that of stronger banks. This non-linearity implies that not only the level of capital but also its distribution across banks in the financial system affects the transmission of shocks to aggregate lending. Likewise, the effects of bank recapitalization on loan growth depend on banks’ starting capital positions and the size of capital injections.

A Tradeoff between the Output and Current Account Effects of Pension Reform
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 24

A Tradeoff between the Output and Current Account Effects of Pension Reform

We compare the long-term output and current account effects of pension reforms that increase the retirement age with those of reforms that cut pension benefits, conditional on reforms achieving similar fiscal targets. We show the presence of a policy trade-off. Pension reforms that increase the retirement age have a large positive effect on output, but a small (and often negative) effect on the current account. In contrast, reforms that cut pension benefits improve the current account balance but reduce output. Mixed pension reforms, which extend the working life and cut pension benefits, can simultaneously boost output and the current account.

Andalucia, Ronda and Granada, Murcia, Valencia, and Catalonia; the portions best suited for the invalid
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 522

Andalucia, Ronda and Granada, Murcia, Valencia, and Catalonia; the portions best suited for the invalid

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1855
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

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Do Corporate Bond Shocks Affect Commercial Bank Lending?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 29

Do Corporate Bond Shocks Affect Commercial Bank Lending?

Understanding how corporate bond market disruptions are transmitted to the rest of the financial system is essential to gauge systemic financial risk and design policy responses. In this study, we extend the vector autoregression model of Gilchrist and Zakrajšek (2012) to explicitly account for the role of commercial banks in the transmission of corporate bond credit spread shocks. We find that corporate bond market shocks can reduce commercial bank lending activity by tightening loan supply. Policies designed to contain stress in the corporate bond market can thus mitigate systemic risk by limiting contagion to the commercial banking sector.

When Banks Punch Back: Macrofinancial Feedback Loops in Stress Tests
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 65

When Banks Punch Back: Macrofinancial Feedback Loops in Stress Tests

In the presence of adverse macroeconomic shocks, simultaneous capital losses in multiple banks can prompt them to contract their balance sheets. These bank responses generate externalities that propagate in the form of macro-financial feedback loops. This paper develops a credit response and externalities analysis model (CREAM) that integrates a disaggregated banking sector into an otherwise standard macroeconomic structural vector autoregressive model. It shows that accounting for macro-financial feedback loops can significantly affect macroeconomic outcomes and bank-specific stress tests results. The heterogeneity in bank lending responses matters: it determines how each bank fares under adverse conditions and the external effects that banks impose on each other and on economic activity. The model can thus be used to assess the contributions of individual banks to systemic risk along the time dimension.

A Tradeoff between the Output and Current Account Effects of Pension Reform
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 24

A Tradeoff between the Output and Current Account Effects of Pension Reform

We compare the long-term output and current account effects of pension reforms that increase the retirement age with those of reforms that cut pension benefits, conditional on reforms achieving similar fiscal targets. We show the presence of a policy trade-off. Pension reforms that increase the retirement age have a large positive effect on output, but a small (and often negative) effect on the current account. In contrast, reforms that cut pension benefits improve the current account balance but reduce output. Mixed pension reforms, which extend the working life and cut pension benefits, can simultaneously boost output and the current account.

Contractual Savings Or Stock Market Development, which Leads?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 50

Contractual Savings Or Stock Market Development, which Leads?

This paper argues that contractual savings (assets of pension funds and life insurance companies) contribute to stock market development.

Diagnostic Criteria in Autoimmune Diseases
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 593

Diagnostic Criteria in Autoimmune Diseases

According to the Autoimmune Diseases Coordinating Committee (ADCC), between 14.7 and 23.5 million people in the USA – up to eight percent of the population are affected by autoimmune disease. Autoimmune diseases are a family of more than 100 chronic, and often disabling, illnesses that develop when underlying defects in the immune system lead the body to attack its own organs, tissues, and cells. In Handbook of Autoimmune Disease, the editors have gathered in a comprehensive handbook a critical review, by renowned experts, of more than 100 autoimmune diseases, divided into two main groups, namely systemic and organ-specific autoimmune diseases. A contemporary overview of these conditions with special emphasis on diagnosis is presented. Each chapter contains the essential information required by attending physicians as well as bench scientists to understand the definition of a specific autoimmune disease, the diagnostic criteria, and the treatment.

Spain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 42

Spain

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2006
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

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