3,698 results on '"Indirect finance"'
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2. PARIS AGREEMENT ALIGNMENT METHODOLOGY FOR EBRD INDIRECT FINANCE
- Subjects
News, opinion and commentary ,European Bank for Reconstruction and Development - Abstract
LONDON -- The following information was released by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD): 17 Jan 2022 Online, 14:00 -- 15:30 London time. EBRD Share this page: The [...]
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- 2021
3. Market Based Indirect Finance as Intermediary Form between Bank Based Financial Systems and Market Based Financial Systems
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モニタリング,質的資産変換機能,負債再編,価格シグナル,リスクシェアリング,シンジケートローン,投資信託 - Abstract
本稿では、金融システムに関する先行研究を基に、間接金融(銀行中心の金融システム)と直接金融(資本市場中心の金融システム)の基本的な機能のうち両金融の中間形態である市場型間接金融に関連のある、モニタリング活動、質的資産変換機能、負債再編(リストラ)、資本市場のフィードバック機能について比較分析する。そしてそれぞれの機能について、日本の金融システムおよび市場型間接金融との関連についても整理し、市場型間接金融はいかなる意味で両者の中問形態であるべきかについて考察を行う。
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- 2007
4. Risk Diversification Benefits of Market Based Indirect Finance : A Practical Analysis of Markowitz's Portfolio Selection Theory
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間接金融と直接金融,市場型間接金融,リターンとリスク(標準偏差),リスク分散化効果 - Abstract
本稿では、これまでの研究成果のサーベイを通じて、市場型間接金融の分散化の利益を明らかにすることを目的としている。市場型間接金融は間接金融(銀行)と直接金融(証券会社)の中間的な形態として捉えることができる。本稿の分析において、銀行と証券の資産のリスク分散化の実証分析を行った結果、市場型間接金融におけるリスク分散化効果が認められた。
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- 2006
5. Syndicated Loan Market and Market - Based Indirect Finance
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市場型間接金融,コミットメントライン,リスク分散機能,プライシングの適正化,高流動性シンジケートローン - Abstract
本稿では、ここ数年市場型間接金融の一つとして注目を集めているシンジケートローン(協調融資)の仕組みや同発行(プライマリー)市場の発展要因、そしてローン債権のセカンダリー(転売)市場の整備状況について概観し、今後のシンジケートローン市場の発展の可能性について考察する。シンジケートローンのプライマリー市場の規模は、資金調達企業や参加金融機関に種々のメリットがあること、間接金融では金融機関に集中していた信用リスクが分散されることなどを背景に急速に拡大している。しかし、セカンダリー市場は未整備の状況にあり、同市場で期待される合理的で適正な価格形成機能がプライマリー市場に結びつかない。このため、セカンダリー市場が整備されない限り、プライマリー市場の発展には限界があると考えられる。
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- 2005
6. Prospects of and Requisites for the Growth of Securities-investment Trusts and the 'Market-based' Indirect Finance
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関西大学 ,Kansai University - Published
- 2000
7. Economic Function of Assurance Services in Marketable Indirect Finance
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関西大学 ,Kansai University - Abstract
小西善雄教授古稀記念特集
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- 1999
8. The Process of Financial System in Japan : Direct Finance and Indirect Finance
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- 1990
9. Financial trend and risk association in Indian agricultural Credit: A study
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Basak, Nabendu
- Published
- 2017
10. THE MICROECONOMICS OF INDIRECT FINANCE
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I. D. Mangoletsis
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Economics and Econometrics ,Indirect finance ,Accounting ,Economics ,Monetary economics ,Finance - Published
- 1975
11. Hitachi Capital America names indirect finance VP
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Executives -- Appointments, resignations and dismissals ,Business - Abstract
Mark C. Duncan has 19 years of experience with GE Capital, most recently as managing director, GE Capital Corporate [...]
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- 2014
12. ECB Allowed for Low Cost Housing Rs. 4,000 Crore Allocated for Rural Housing Fund Indirect Finance Under Priority Sector Doubled
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Rural development -- Economic aspects ,General interest - Abstract
India, March 16 -- The Finance Minister, Shri Mukherjee informed that provisions under the Rural Housing Fund are proposed to be enhanced from Rs. 3000 crore to Rs. 4000 crore. [...]
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- 2012
13. Does the resource-dependent motivation to disclose environmental information impact company financing? Evidence from renewable energy companies of China
- Author
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Jiaru Yu, Yifan Shen, Lingyun He, and Fengyun Liu
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Finance ,Government ,Incentive ,Resource (biology) ,Resource dependence theory ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Indirect finance ,business.industry ,Scale (social sciences) ,China ,business ,Renewable energy - Abstract
Corporate environmental information disclosure systems are important for controlling pollution caused by corporate activities. However, different motives associated with environmental information disclosure have different influences on the financing of companies. This paper adopts renewable energy companies instead of high pollution industries as a research object. The study analyzes the resource-dependent disclosure motivation of renewable energy companies, and the impact of environmental information disclosure on the scale and cost of direct and indirect financing. The results show the following. First, renewable energy companies in China have a resource-dependent motivation to disclose environmental information, with a gap between the level of environmental information disclosure and their actual environmental performance. Second, renewable energy companies may obtain more direct financing amount and lower indirect financing costs, but cannot obtain lower direct financing costs and more indirect financing amount by improving the level of environmental information disclosure with the resource-dependent motivation. Third, there are differences in the specific incentives for environmental information disclosure among the Eastern, Middle, and Western regions of China. The government needs to standardize the detailed rules and standards of the corporate environmental information disclosure system, and improve the environmental protection awareness and the implementation of green credit in the Western region.
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- 2022
14. Banking Sector Openness and Economic Growth
- Author
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Yan Wang and Nihal Bayraktar
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Saving and Capital Investment ,History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Financial intermediary ,Monetary economics ,Development ,Human capital ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Capital accumulation ,Banks ,Banks&Banking Reform,Economic Theory&Research,Financial Intermediation,Achieving Shared Growth,Financial Crisis Management&Restructuring ,Capacity E220 ,Business and International Management ,Financial services ,Financial Markets [Economic Development] ,Production E230 [Macroeconomics] ,Mortgages G210 ,business.industry ,Economic sector ,Financial integration ,Other Depository Institutions ,Corporate Finance and Governance O160 ,International economics ,Capital ,Micro Finance Institutions ,Financial regulation ,Indirect finance ,Investment ,business ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy E440 - Abstract
Banking sector openness may directly increase growth by improving the quality of financial services and increasing funds available, or indirectly by improving the efficiency of financial intermediaries, both of which may reduce the cost of financing, in turn, increase capital accumulation and economic growth. The objective of this paper is to empirically reinvestigate these direct and indirect links, using a more advanced econometric technique (generalised method-of-moments [GMM] dynamic panel estimators). An illustrative model is presented to link financial market development with investment. The empirical results support the presence of direct and indirect links, thus encouraging countries planning to open their financial markets.
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- 2023
15. Financing for sustainability: Empirical analysis of green bond premium and issuer heterogeneity
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Nian Zhong, Xuan Zheng, and Qiaoyan Sheng
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Finance ,Sustainable development ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Atmospheric Science ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,Bond ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Information asymmetry ,Issuer ,Corporate group ,Indirect finance ,Sustainability ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,business ,Greenwashing ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
More recently, investors’ preference for green bonds is of particular interest for researchers. The possible non-pecuniary motive in sustainable finance can be identified by the green bond premium. But no consensus has been achieved owing to differences in samples and market settings. This paper specifically focuses on the estimation of the green bond premium in China. We introduced three issuance motivation theories to explain the drivers of green premium and convinced them through a set of empirical tests. The propensity score matching method was employed to claim that compared with matched conventional bonds, green bonds are priced at an average negative premium of 7.8bps, implying that green projects may be issued at a lower cost. Considering that a financial group has a higher negative premium than a corporate group, green financing for sustainable development is still led by indirect finance. Furthermore, empirical results convince that a negative premium is pronounced for state-owned enterprises and varies across the financial and corporate groups. Central SOEs have more advantage in raising funds than local SOEs. In addition, the effect of ownership on the green premium will significantly change if bond issues with a third-party verification. The role of verification is important in reducing information asymmetry and avoiding greenwashing behavior. We suggest that financial resources need to be properly allocated to the real enterprises through third-party verification or government supportive measures.
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- 2021
16. FINANCIAL ASSURANCE ASPECTS OF THE TOURISM SECTOR DEVELOPMENT IN UKRAINE UNDER CURRENT CONDITIONS
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Yu. Barsky, M. Lepkyi, L. Matviichuk, V. Podolak, and I. Karpyuk
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Economic efficiency ,Finance ,Balance (accounting) ,Consistency (negotiation) ,State (polity) ,Indirect finance ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Financial instrument ,General partnership ,business ,Tourism ,media_common - Abstract
The research deals with the state of the tourism sector of Ukraine under current conditions. The main funding sources for tourism entities have been considered. The financial measures taken by Ukraine and neighboring countries for overcoming the consequences of the pandemic in the tourism sector have been summarized. The importance of effective financial initiative support in the above-mentioned area has been substantiated. Several financial tools that should be used for the development of the tourism sector in terms of the pandemic are presented. The financial instruments of tourist activity stimulation are singled out: direct financing (public funding instruments) and indirect financing (fiscal incentives, state property rent relief, rate of tourist tax, etc.). The main destructive factors of the tourism sector development have been determined, which include: the lack of systematic state support for the tourism entities development under current conditions; a significant level of the tourism sector shadowing; misuse of funds from the land tourist tax; unsatisfactory condition of tourist facilities; worn-out infrastructure in most regions, etc. The following measures are needed to be implemented to improve the effectiveness of financial instruments for tourism development: the creation of an attractive investment climate in tourism; development of tourist infrastructure; intensification of public funding for tourism and the efforts of local governments to identify internal reserves for funding; intended use of funds from the land tourist tax; use of the potential of the public-private partnership mechanism at the local level; intensification of cooperation with non-governmental institutions, including foreign ones, which are interested in the implementation of tourism development programs, etc. The introduction of anti-crisis key factors, systematization, and consistency in the implementation of the above-mentioned measures will help to stabilize the development of tourism entities in the shortest possible time and achieve a level of economic efficiency and balance between security, public health, and economic interests. Keywords: pandemic, tourist activity, financial instruments, tourist tax, incentives. JEL Classification L83, G19 Formulas: 0; fig.: 1; tabl.: 0; bibl.: 14.
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- 2021
17. The Development of Indirect Finance System in Japan
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Hisashi, Masaki
- Abstract
資料
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- 1985
18. Indirect Finance and Direct Finance : A Relationship between Real Sector and Financial Sector
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- 1985
19. Foreign Experience in Tax Regulation of Sports Development
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S. V. Bogachov, M. R. Pinskaya, and Yu. A. Steshenko
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Public economics ,direct and indirect financing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,tax incentives ,HD28-70 ,government funding ,Promotion (rank) ,Incentive ,Order (exchange) ,Indirect finance ,Content analysis ,0502 economics and business ,Management. Industrial management ,Russian federation ,regulation of mass sports development ,Business ,050207 economics ,sports ,050212 sport, leisure & tourism ,media_common - Abstract
The subject of the study is the indirect financing of sports development abroad through tax incentives. This paper aims to analyze and summarize foreign experience of tax approaches to the sports development and to substantiate the possibility of its application in the Russian Federation. The following methods were used: content analysis of scientific papers and the legal framework related; comparing the different sports funding models and the tax instruments used in the analyzed countries to promote sports; logical synthesis to gain insights and form recommendations. Sports currently play an important role in addressing both social and economic challenges, which reinforces governmental regulation. The financing models for sports development applications abroad are examined. Models have been found to differ by the use of direct and indirect methods of sports financing methods, including tax incentives. The experience of tax incentives application for sports promotion in the United States, Germany, the Netherlands, Hungary, and Belarus has been analyzed, similarities and differences of the ways goals are achieved have been identified. Possibilities for applying foreign experience in tax incentives for the sports development in the Russian Federation have been identified. Conclusions have been made on the need to further analysis of foreign experience in order to improve methods of indirect financing of sports development. The economic rationale for the proposed tax regulation in sports development should be ensured to prove feasibility thereof.
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- 2021
20. Problematika Implementasi Akad Mudhārabah pada Perbankan Syariah di Indonesia
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Moh. Rasyid
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Constructive criticism ,Indirect finance ,business.industry ,Sharia ,Jurisprudence ,Capital (economics) ,Position (finance) ,Accounting ,Fiqh ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Tulisan ini mengulas implementasi akad mudhārabah pada perbankan syariah di Indonesia yang secara spesifik lebih ditekankan pada aspek syariah, fikih, dan fatwa DSN-MUI sebagai titik berangkatnya. Urgensitas tulisan ini berada pada posisinya yang bukan saja sebagai kritik-konstruktif terhadap lembaga keuangan yang mengemban misi relegius, akan tetapi juga sebagai sarana diskusi bagi para pelajar, akademisi, dan praktisi perbankan agar oprasional perbankan syariah tetap berada pada rel syariat Islam. Ini dikarenakan masih banyaknya temuan di lapangan tentang ketidaksesuaian operasional perbankan syariah dengan ketentuan fikih dan fatwa DSN-MUI tentang mudhārabah. Penelitian ini merupakan penelitian kualitatif dengan pendekatan yuridis-normatif. Hasil penelitian ini menyimpulkan sekurang-kurangnya dua hal. Pertama, rumusan mudhārabah sudah mengalami evolusi dari konsep direct financing menjadi indirect financing. Kedua, secara praksis ketentuan syariah, fikih, dan fatwa DSN-MUI tentang mudhārabah tidak sepenuhnya diterapkan sebagaimana mestinya di sebagian perbankan atau lembaga keuangan syariah di Indonesia. Ketentuan tentang jaminan dan pembebanan ganti rugi modal dalam akad mudhārabah merupakan dua hal yang paling rentan menimbulkan adanya gap antara das sein dengan das sollen di perbankan syariah.
- Published
- 2021
21. The Microeconomics of Indirect Finance
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
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22. Financing of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Based on Financing Guarantee Institutions
- Author
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Ti Hu
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Finance ,Alliance ,National economy ,restrict ,business.industry ,Indirect finance ,Business ,Local economic development ,China ,Experimental research ,LEAPS - Abstract
In recent years, China's small and medium-sized enterprises have developed by leaps and bounds, playing an increasingly important role in the whole national economy and making great contributions to China's economic growth. However, the poor financing channel has become the most important factor restricting the better and faster development of SMEs, and it has also been the focus of the further development of SMEs in China. This paper briefly introduces the development of small and medium-sized enterprise clusters in China, and makes an in-depth analysis of the direct and indirect financing advantages of small and medium-sized enterprise clusters and the factors that restrict the exertion of the financing advantages of clusters. Then, according to the present situation, this paper puts forward a way to solve the financing difficulties of small and medium-sized enterprise clusters, that is, mutual guarantee alliance. According to the financing guarantee institutions, this paper discusses the development of mutual guarantee alliance in China, and analyzes the existing problems of mutual guarantee alliance. In addition, through in-depth analysis of financing guarantee institutions, it is demonstrated that a stable mutual guarantee alliance can be established in the cluster, and the guarantee magnification of the mutual guarantee alliance can be obtained. Finally, this paper compares the mutual guarantee alliance with the traditional enterprise financing method, and analyzes its practical effect. Experimental research shows that popularizing mutual financing guarantee and promoting the development of mutual financing guarantee institutions can effectively alleviate the financing difficulties of small and medium-sized enterprises, and the guarantee magnification is basically kept above 8, which has important practical significance for promoting local economic development.
- Published
- 2021
23. Outreach and Inclusiveness of Formal Agricultural Credit System: Some Reflections
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Jumrani, Jaya and Agarwal, Shaily
- Published
- 2012
24. The Financial System
- Author
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John J A Burke
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Indirect finance ,Accounting management ,Financial instrument ,Market data ,Financial intermediary ,Financial analysis ,Financial ratio ,Position (finance) ,Financial system ,Business - Abstract
The title of this textbook makes it necessary to define the term “financial services” for purposes of exposition and subsequent analysis. It is virtually impossible to describe the extant financial services system as it exists in every distinct region of the globe. The infrastructure holding together the individual pieces that allow cross-border delivery of services was developed by historical accident without a pre-conceived master plan. To resolve these impediments to providing a meaningful narrative of financial services, this chapter focuses upon the UK financial system. It is large in relation to the economy, is an important financial centre for global transactions in financial assets, and has already been mapped by the Bank of England. The UK financial system is a microcosm through which financial services generally may be defined and analysed. Brexit, and the purported loss of London as a global financial centre, are irrelevant for purposes of illustration, since the UK is rich in financial institutions. This chapter is descriptive leaving for later critical analysis of underlying and misleading assumptions.
- Published
- 2021
25. RMB in the infrastructure finance of the Belt and Road initiative
- Author
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Gang Jianhua, Zhang He, Zhang Wenchun, Zhang Chengsi, Hu Tianlong, and Wang Fang
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Finance ,Government ,Industrialisation ,Indirect finance ,business.industry ,Urbanization ,Business ,Marketization ,Lagging ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Emerging markets - Abstract
The countries along the Belt and Road are mainly developing and emerging economies which are undergoing the rapid industrialization and urbanization, but the infrastructure in those countries is lagging. A lack of funds is the common problem for investment in the Belt and Road infrastructure. Whether the finance mode is suitable directly decides the efficiency of Belt and Road infrastructure projects. Direct and indirect finance have their advantages as well as disadvantages respectively. Combined with each other via innovation, they can function better in the Belt and Road infrastructure construction. Countries along the Belt and Road, especially the developing countries, rely on the government to invest in, construct, and maintain infrastructure. The projects are monopolized by government with little interest. Marketization of infrastructure construction is related to the interest of government, individual, foreign enterprises, and the public.
- Published
- 2019
26. The Effect of Bank Loan Dependence on Management and Analyst Forecasts
- Author
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Mikiharu Noma and Saori Nara
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ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Loan ,Indirect finance ,Equity (finance) ,Business ,Monetary economics ,Information environment ,Stock (geology) - Abstract
This paper investigates whether and how dependence on bank loans affects management and analyst forecasts in Japan, where indirect finance has played an important role in financial arrangements for many years. We study 4,681 firm-year observations listed on the Japanese equity market from 2001 to 2011, and we show the following results. First, the dependence on bank loans increases management forecast errors. Second, the dependence on bank loans increases analyst forecast errors and dispersions but decreases analyst coverage. Third, dependence on bank loans decreases the value relevance of management and analyst forecasts. These empirical results show that disclosure and information environment are not good for firms that depend on bank loans. Furthermore, management and analyst forecasts are less incorporated in stock prices because investors rely on bank monitoring and do not utilize firms’ public disclosures or other information, such as analyst forecasts, for those who depend on bank loan. Analyst coverage, analyst forecast accuracy, and forecast agreement are all lower for firms having long term-established relationships with banks in Japan. By contrast, our research contributes two things. First, we show that disclosure of firms that are dependent on bank loans are inadequate. More specifically, management forecasts of firms that are dependent on bank loans are less accurate. Second, we reveal that management and analyst forecasts are less incorporated in stock prices in firms that are reliant on bank loans.
- Published
- 2019
27. Is Financial Structure Good for Marine Economic Growth? An Evidence from China
- Author
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Yanjuan Cui and Xiaofei Xu
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Sustainable development ,Ecology ,Financial asset ,Indirect finance ,Loan ,Bond ,Economics ,Financial system ,Marketization ,China ,Stock (geology) ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Xu, X. and Cui, Y., 2020. Is financial structure good for marine economic growth? An evidence from China. In: Li, L. and Huang, X. (eds.), Sustainable Development in Coastal Regions: A Perspective of Environment, Economy, and Technology. Journal of Coastal Research, Special Issue No. 112, pp. 311-314. Coconut Creek (Florida), ISSN 0749-0208.This paper mainly studies the relationship between China's marine economic growth and financial structure. Based on the data analysis from 2001 to 2019, there is an inverted U-shaped nonlinear effect between China's loan, bond, stock financing and marine economic growth, so there will be an optimal scale of loan, bond and stock financing in China. In addition, from the perspective of financial asset structure, the results also show that the marketization of financial structure can promote the growth of marine economy. Therefore, China should control the scale of indirect financing mainly by loans and direct financing mainly by bonds and stocks within a reasonable range, so as to promote the rapid and healthy development of marine economy.
- Published
- 2020
28. Why Is Financial Stability a Goal of Public Policy?
- Author
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Andrew Crockett
- Subjects
Finance ,Financial regulation ,business.industry ,Indirect finance ,Financial risk ,Financial intermediary ,Market data ,Financial analysis ,Economics ,Financial system ,Financial econometrics ,business ,Financial market participants - Abstract
Anumber of developments in recent years have combined to put the issue of financial stability at the top of the agenda, not just of supervisory authorities, but of public policymakers more generally. These developments include: the explosive growth in the volume of financial transactions, the increased complexity of new instruments, costly crises in national financial systems, and several high pro
- Published
- 2020
29. Financing Predicament of Small and Medium-Sized Foreign Trade Enterprises in China–Based on Big Data Analysis
- Author
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Xuewei Li
- Subjects
Finance ,Government ,World economy ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Indirect finance ,Big data ,International trade ,Discount points ,business ,China - Abstract
With the steady expansion of the world economy, China’s import and export trade is booming day by day, and foreign trade has become a major factor to promote our country’s economic growth. As one of the economic subjects of external trade, small and medium-sized enterprises in foreign trade play an irreplaceable role. However, many small and medium-sized foreign trade enterprises encounter financing difficulties in the process of the development. On the foundation of big data analysis, with the starting point of the financing of small and medium-sized enterprises in foreign trade, firstly, this paper describes the present financing condition of the small and medium-sized enterprises in foreign trade as a whole, and then the reasons are analyzed. The reasons are divided as enterprises themselves, indirect financing, direct financing, private financing, and the government one by one.
- Published
- 2020
30. 중국의 금융개방 환경 변화와 대응방향 (Changing Environment for Opening of Chinese Financial Sector and Response Measures)
- Author
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Sang Baek Hyun, Su Yeob Na, Ko Un Cho, Bongkyo Seo, and Youngsun Kim
- Subjects
History ,Government ,Polymers and Plastics ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Accession ,New normal ,Market economy ,Indirect finance ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Chinese economy ,China ,Pace ,Financial sector - Abstract
본 보고서에서는 중국 금융개방의 환경 변화를 분석하였다. 대내적으로는 금융개방 관련 정책 및 제도의 변화를 살펴보았고, 대외적으로는 미·중 갈등 심화가 중국 금융개방에 미치는 영향을 분석하였다. 산업·기술 측면으로는 중국 디지털 금융 발전에 따른 미·중 금융 플랫폼 헤게모니 경쟁에 대해 살펴보았다. 마지막으로 중국 금융개방을 평가하고 한국의 대응방향과 한·중 금융협력에 대한 정책 시사점을 제안하였다. China's financial opening has progressed at a very slow pace, unlike the manufacturing and trade sectors that have pushed for an active opening to the outside world. The Chinese economy has been growing rapidly while serving as a global production base, but since 2012, it has become necessary to modify its approaches to achieve growth as it enters the so-called "New Normal (新常態)", an era of medium-speed growth. Recently, new reform and opening measures have been taken in various fields to improve the quality of the Chinese economy, and the need for reform and opening in the financial sector has also increased. Internally, the financial system centered on China's state-owned commercial banks has focused on indirect financing, which has served as a major obstacle to upgrading China's economy and industry to the next level, further increasing the need for reform and opening of the financial sector. Moreover, externally, the U.S.-China conflict which began in earnest in 2018, is applying strongly pressure toward reform and opening in China's financial sector. The Chinese government began to show a proactive attitude toward financial opening amid such internal needs and external pressure, and an important development was seen in China's financial opening when President Xi Jinping declared further opening measures at the Boao Forum in April 2018. The Chinese financial authorities have prepared follow-up measures related to financial opening, and the Chinese government's efforts toward financial opening in the three years from 2018 to 2020 yielded more results than the ten-year opening period since its accession to the WTO. (the rest omitted)
- Published
- 2020
31. Design and Analysis of the Capital Operation and the Financing Model of the State-Owned Investment Enterprises Based on the Cloud Security
- Author
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Songsen Xue
- Subjects
Finance ,Cloud computing security ,Trojan ,business.industry ,Indirect finance ,Capital (economics) ,Key (cryptography) ,The Internet ,Cloud computing ,business ,Investment (macroeconomics) - Abstract
The preservation and appreciation of the state-owned assets are very important to the national economic development. With the continuous progress of our society and the improvement of the financial system, the state-owned investment enterprises play a key role in the preservation and appreciation of the state-owned assets. Therefore, the capital operation and the financing in the state-owned investment enterprises are particularly important. The cloud security is an important branch of the cloud computing technology and has been widely used in the field of the anti-virus. The cloud security obtains the latest information of the Trojan horses and the malicious programs in the Internet by monitoring the abnormal behaviors of the software in the network through a large number of the netlike clients, pushes them to the server for the automatic analysis and processing, and distributes the solutions to the viruses and the Trojan horses to each client. At present, there are many financing methods available. For enterprises, they cannot use the same way to carry out the capital operation, but should cooperate to use the direct and the indirect financing methods according to the actual situations.
- Published
- 2020
32. Instruments of Government Support for PPP Projects
- Author
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Evgenia A. Starikova and Vladimir V. Piskunov
- Subjects
Government ,Public–private partnership ,State (polity) ,Indirect finance ,General partnership ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Subsidy ,Russian federation ,Business ,Public administration ,Public support ,media_common - Abstract
The issues of government support for infrastructure projects implemented on the principles of public-private partnership are studied. General classification of public support instruments is offered. Financial and non-financial instruments used in world practices and in the Russian Federation, including direct and indirect financing of projects, state guarantees and benefits, administrative and methodological support of market participants are classified and analyzed. Based on the study of relevant international experience and current situation in Russia, major existing problems are identified, and recommendations are made on possible ways to improve the effectiveness of the system of support for public-private partnership projects in Russia, including the creation of separate specialized financial institutions.
- Published
- 2020
33. Credit Risk and Equity Returns: An Augmented Fama-French Five-Factor Model in the Chinese Market
- Author
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Hui Lin and Tangrong Li
- Subjects
Indirect finance ,education ,Financial market ,Equity (finance) ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Capital asset pricing model ,Portfolio ,Context (language use) ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,health care economics and organizations ,Credit risk - Abstract
Whether the credit risk should be priced has been widely debated. We study this issue in the Chinese context, where the financial market has been long dominated by indirect financing. We employ the Merton’s (1974) model to measure the credit risk of firms listed on Chinese A-share market monthly. We document a positive relationship between credit risk and subsequent returns. Following a high-minus-low strategy, we construct a credit risk factor DMU, which is then incorporated into Fama-French models. By comparing the performance of 6 competing models, we find that the credit risk factor helps improve the description of portfolio returns while the investment factor makes little contribution. The conclusions are further confirmed by regression details including adjusted-R2, AIC tests and intercepts. Meanwhile, the slopes on DMU are significant for most tested portfolios and present monotonic patterns when the credit risk increases, implying that the credit risk factor can well explain the variation in the cross section of portfolio returns. Our findings show that in the Chinese context, the credit risk factor is relevant and the DMU-augmented Fama-French five-factor model is a preferred model.
- Published
- 2020
34. Linkages between financial development, financial instability, financial liberalisation and economic growth in Africa
- Author
-
Kupukile Mlambo, M. Enowbi Batuo, and Simplice A. Asongu
- Subjects
Finance ,050208 finance ,business.industry ,Financial risk ,Financial instrument ,05 social sciences ,Financial intermediary ,Geography of finance ,Financial system ,Financial regulation ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Financial analysis ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,050207 economics ,business ,Financial market participants - Abstract
In the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, the implications of financial liberalisation for stability and economic growth has come under increased scrutiny. One strand of literature posits a positive relationship between financial liberalisation and economic growth and development. However, others emphasise the link between financial liberalisation is intrinsically associated with financial instability which may be harmful to economic growth and development. This study assesses linkages between financial instability, financial liberalisation, financial development and economic growth in 41 African countries for the period 1985-2010. The results suggest that financial development and financial liberalisation have positive effects on financial instability. The findings also reveal that economic growth reduces financial instability and the magnitude of reduction is higher in the pre-liberalisation period compared to post-liberalisation period.
- Published
- 2018
35. Financial factors and labor market fluctuations
- Author
-
Yahong Zhang
- Subjects
Finance ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Financial market ,Mark to model ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Financial crisis ,Unemployment ,Economics ,Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium ,Economic model ,050207 economics ,business ,Financial market participants ,media_common - Abstract
The recent financial crisis has been associated with a significant rise in the unemployment rate in the U.S. To understand the impact of financial frictions and shocks on unemployment fluctuations, I develop a monetary DSGE model with explicit financial and labor market frictions. The model is estimated using U.S. data over the period of 1984Q1 to 2016Q4. I find that the model accounts well for the cyclical behavior of unemployment and vacancies observed in the data. The historical decomposition results show that financial wealth shocks contribute significantly to the rise in the unemployment rate following the recent financial crisis. Overall, I find that financial wealth shocks contribute more than 30 per cent of the fluctuations in unemployment and vacancies in the U.S. during the sample period.
- Published
- 2018
36. Financial openness and market liquidity in emerging markets
- Author
-
Chia-Hao Lee and Pei-I Chou
- Subjects
050208 finance ,05 social sciences ,Liquidity crisis ,Financial system ,Liquidity risk ,Market liquidity ,Market depth ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Bond market ,Business ,050207 economics ,Market impact ,Capital market ,Finance - Abstract
The goal of this study is to explore the effect of financial openness in emerging markets on the domestic financial market liquidity and then to clarify the linkage between financial openness and market liquidity. The empirical results show that higher the degree of the financial market openness enhances the domestic financial market liquidity, and the effect of the financial market openness on the emerging markets is more significance than the developed markets. We expect the empirical results of this study can provide a new insight into the development of emerging financial markets.
- Published
- 2018
37. Bank concentration, competition, and financial inclusion
- Author
-
Javier Pereira and Ann L. Owen
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Financial intermediary ,Financial ratio ,Financial system ,Sample (statistics) ,lcsh:HD72-88 ,lcsh:Economic growth, development, planning ,Competition (economics) ,0502 economics and business ,lcsh:Finance ,lcsh:HG1-9999 ,Financial analysis ,Market power ,050207 economics ,Financial services ,Financial inclusion ,050208 finance ,Poverty ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Outreach ,Financial regulation ,Indirect finance ,Market data ,Business ,Finance ,Financial market participants ,Panel data - Abstract
Expanding access to financial services holds the promise to help reduce poverty and foster economic development. However, little is still known about the determinants of the outreach of financial systems across countries. Our study is the first attempt to employ a large panel of countries, several indicators of financial inclusion and a comprehensive set of bank competition measures to study the role of banking system structure as a determinant of cross-country variability in financial outreach for households. We use panel data from 83 countries over a 10-year period to estimate models with both country and time fixed effects. We find that greater banking industry concentration is associated with more access to deposit accounts and loans, provided that the market power of banks is limited. We find evidence that countries in which regulations allow banks to engage in a broader scope of activities are also characterized by greater financial inclusion. Our results are robust to changes in sample, data, and estimation strategy and suggest that the degree of competition is an important aspect of inclusive financial sectors. JEL classification: G21, L11, O16, Keywords: Financial inclusion, Bank concentration, Market power
- Published
- 2018
38. Do financial structures affect exchange rate and stock price interaction? Evidence from emerging markets
- Author
-
Xiaobo Tang and Xingyuan Yao
- Subjects
Finance ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Cointegration ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Financial structure ,Monetary economics ,Stock price ,Exchange rate ,Granger causality ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Business and International Management ,business ,Emerging markets ,Stock (geology) - Abstract
We investigated the relationship between stock prices and exchange rates in eleven emerging markets over the period of 1988 to 2014 using cointegration methodology and multivariate granger causality tests. We find that in emerging markets, the inner-financial structure, which reflects the proportion of direct financing and indirect financing, plays an important role in the link between exchange rates and stock prices. For ten out of the eleven emerging markets studied, the financial structure had a significant impact, either through the flow channel or stock channel. The effects of financial-economic structure (FIR) were much smaller.
- Published
- 2018
39. An Essay on Financial Information in the Era of Computerization
- Author
-
Christophe Schinckus
- Subjects
Flash crash ,050208 finance ,Financial economics ,Strategy and Management ,Accounting management ,05 social sciences ,Financial market ,Financial intermediary ,Financial system ,Library and Information Sciences ,Management information systems ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Financial modeling ,050207 economics ,Financial econometrics ,Information Systems - Abstract
This article deals with the increasing computerization of the financial markets and the consequences of such process on our ability to collect information about financial prices. The concept of information is at the heart of financial economics simply because this notion is a precondition for all investments. Since financial prices characterize an agreement on a transaction between two counterparties, they understandably became a key informational indicator for decision. This article will analyse the increasing computerization of financial sphere by discussing the recent emergence of what is called a “flash crash” and its impact on the traditional ways of collecting information in finance (technical analysis, fundamental analysis and statistical approach). I argue that the growing computerization of financial markets generated a “hyper-reality” in which financial prices do not refer to “something” anymore implying a revision of our usual way of defining/using the notion of information.
- Published
- 2018
40. Financial literacy and participation in the derivatives markets
- Author
-
Yu-Jen Hsiao and Wei-Che Tsai
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,05 social sciences ,Financial system ,Commission ,Purchasing ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Derivatives market ,Financial literacy ,Stock market ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,Finance ,Barriers to entry ,Financial market participants - Abstract
We set out in this study to determine whether individuals with higher levels of financial literacy are more likely to be active participants in the derivatives markets. Our empirical results, based upon an official National Survey undertaken by the Financial Supervisory Commission of Taiwan, reveal that even after controlling for stock market participation rates, financial literacy represents a significant benefit to individuals since it helps them to lower the entry barriers to purchasing complex derivatives products. We also find that household wealth, gender, residential location and diverse sources of information have significant effects on participation rates in the derivatives markets. Furthermore, when taking into consideration issues of accessibility or measurement error, the positive effects of financial literacy on derivatives market participation are found to remain largely unchanged.
- Published
- 2018
41. FINANCIAL STABILITY AND FINANCIAL INCLUSION: THE CASE OF SME LENDING
- Author
-
Victor Pontines and Peter J. Morgan
- Subjects
Financial inclusion ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,business.industry ,Inter-dealer broker ,Financial risk ,05 social sciences ,Financial intermediary ,Financial ratio ,Financial system ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Financial analysis ,Business ,050207 economics ,Financial services - Abstract
Developing economies are seeking to promote financial inclusion, i.e., greater access to financial services for low-income households and firms. This raises the question of whether greater financial inclusion tends to increase or decrease financial stability. A number of studies have suggested both positive and negative impacts on financial stability, but very few empirical studies have been made. This study focuses on the implications of greater financial inclusion for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) for financial stability. It estimates the effects of measures of the share of bank lending to SMEs on two measures of financial stability — bank nonperforming loans and bank Z scores. We find some evidence that an increased share of lending to SMEs aids financial stability by reducing non-performing loans (NPLs) and the probability of default by financial institutions.
- Published
- 2018
42. Financial Development, Financial Liberalization and Social Capital
- Author
-
Aljar Meesters, Luuk Elkhuizen, Jan Jacobs, Niels Hermes, and Research programme EEF
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,EFFICIENCY ,financial development ,050204 development studies ,Financial ratio ,Financial system ,Financial capital ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Statement of changes in financial position ,Financial analysis ,050207 economics ,BANKING ,ECONOMIC-GROWTH ,Liberalization ,Financial liberalization ,05 social sciences ,International economics ,PERFORMANCE ,generalized trust ,Indirect finance ,social capital ,TRUST ,Panel data ,Social capital ,PANEL-DATA - Abstract
The relationship between financial liberalization policies and financial development is controversial. The impact of these policies differs greatly across countries. In the literature, the quality of formal institutions has been identified as an important source of this heterogeneity, as countries with a weak institutional environment generally fail to benefit from financial liberalization. Using panel data covering 82 countries for the period 1973–2008, we find evidence that social capital may substitute for formal institutions as a prerequisite for effective financial liberalization policies. In particular, we find that during the post Washington-consensus period countries with a high prevailing level of social capital can ensure that financial liberalization positively influences financial development, despite the poor quality of their formal institutions.
- Published
- 2018
43. Does the impact of financial liberalization on income inequality depend on financial development? Some new evidence
- Author
-
Regina Pleninger, Jakob de Haan, Jan-Egbert Sturm, and Research programme GEM
- Subjects
Macroeconomics ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Inequality ,Liberalization ,financial development ,DATABASE ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Financial liberalization ,05 social sciences ,Financial intermediary ,Financial ratio ,Economic inequality ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Financial analysis ,050207 economics ,Volatility (finance) ,REFORMS ,media_common ,income inequality - Abstract
Instead of empirically finding that higher levels of financial development reduce the positive impact of financial liberalization on inequality, as others do, we come up with the opposite result: financial development strengthens the inequality-raising impact of financial liberalization. We suggest that by, e.g., allowing financial liberalization to lead to more volatility and uncertainty, the model of Bumann and Lensink (2016 “Capital Account Liberalization and Income Inequality.“ Journal of International Money and Finance 61: 143–162.) can be extended as such that also an amplifying instead of reducing effect of financial depth on the impact of financial liberalization on income inequality can be theoretically justified.
- Published
- 2018
44. The hidden soul of financial innovation: An agent-based modelling of home mortgage securitization and the finance-growth nexus
- Author
-
Eliana Lauretta
- Subjects
Finance ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Financial innovation ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Geography of finance ,Financial system ,Financial regulation ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Financial crisis ,Economics ,Financial analysis ,Financial modeling ,Structured finance ,050207 economics ,business - Abstract
This paper investigates the interaction between financial innovation and securitization. To this end, it introduces the rate of financial innovation (RoFIN) as an endogenous variable in an Agent-Based Model (ABM) set up and studies its interaction with the non-fixed fraction of securitized mortgage loans. RoFIN is able to capture financial agents’ business decisions on using financial innovation tools, processes and services, such as the home mortgage securitization process. In the aftermath of the 2007–2009 financial and economic crisis it has been argued that financial innovation and securitization have increased macro/finance systemic instability via, for example, non-linear two-way spillovers between the financial system and the macroeconomy. The ABM model proposed enables the capture of these dynamics. High values of RoFIN (i.e. exceeding the threshold of 50%) make financial innovation become harmful for the economic system, leading to a switch from a virtuous to an unvirtuous business cycle. When RoFIN reaches 90%, the numerical simulations come close to the macro/finance dynamics observed before and during the financial crisis. Given its potential role in triggering financial and economic instability, RoFIN is of interest for financial regulation and supervision. How this endogenous variable may be influenced by means of operational variables under the control of policymakers remains a subject for future research.
- Published
- 2018
45. ICT, conflicts in financial intermediation and financial access: evidence of synergy and threshold effects
- Author
-
Simplice A. Asongu and Paul N. Acha-Anyi
- Subjects
Finance ,Economics and Econometrics ,Financial sector development ,Leverage (finance) ,Computer Networks and Communications ,business.industry ,050204 development studies ,05 social sciences ,Financial intermediary ,Financial ratio ,Financial system ,Information and Communications Technology ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Financial analysis ,050207 economics ,business ,Empirical evidence ,Information Systems - Abstract
In this study we investigate the role of information and communication technology (ICT) in conflicts of financial intermediation for financial access. The empirical evidence is based on contemporary (or current values) and non-contemporary (or lagged by a year) quantile regressions in 53 African countries for the period 2004-2011. The main findings are: First, the net effect of ICT in formalization for financial activity in the banking system is consistently beneficial with positive thresholds. The fact that corresponding, unconditional and conditional effects are persistently positive is evidence of synergy or complementary effects. Second, the net effect of ICT in financial informalization for financial activity in the financial system is negative with a consistent negative threshold. Hence, the positive (negative) complementarity of ICT and financial formalization (informalization) is an increasing (decreasing) function of financial activity. Policy measures on how to leverage the synergy or complementarity between ICT and financial formalization in order to enhance financial access are discussed.
- Published
- 2017
46. Impact of sci-tech finance on the innovation efficiency of China's marine industry
- Author
-
Xu Sheng, Qingde Yue, and Binbin Lu
- Subjects
Rate of return ,Finance ,Economics and Econometrics ,Government ,business.industry ,Financial market ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Aquatic Science ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Indirect finance ,Business ,China ,Empirical evidence ,Law ,Risk management ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
To realize the high-quality development of China's marine economy, it is important to vigorously promote blue finance and increase the support of science and technology finance for the innovation development of the marine industry. Based on the existing literature research, this paper uses two-step empirical evidence to investigate the role of science and technology finance on the innovation efficiency of the marine industry by combining the development status of science and technology innovation, science and technology finance in the marine industry. The results of the study show that government financial investment in science and technology finance has a significant contribution to the innovation efficiency of the marine industry; The innovation efficiency of marine industry is positively but not significantly affected by the investment of enterprises' funds in science and technology, and the innovation efficiency is inhibited by the investment in entrepreneurial risk management. In addition, there are still large differences in the efficiency of innovation in the marine industry among different regions. Moreover, we propose the government support the marine industry science and technology innovation fully, optimize risk investment and improve the investment return guarantee mechanism, and unblocked the indirect financing channels of the financial market for the sea-related science and technology innovation enterprises, and give policy recommendations to develop the marine industry science and technology innovation activities.
- Published
- 2021
47. Does financial structure affect CO2 emissions? Evidence from G20 countries
- Author
-
Xiaobo Tang and Xingyuan Yao
- Subjects
050208 finance ,Natural resource economics ,05 social sciences ,Developing country ,Green development ,Indirect finance ,Greenhouse gas ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Per capita ,050207 economics ,Developed country ,Productivity ,Total factor productivity ,Finance - Abstract
This study examines the effect of financial structure on CO2 emissions in G20 countries from 1971 to 2014. The empirical results show significant heterogeneity among developed and developing countries in the effect of financial structure on per capita carbon emissions. The ratio of direct to indirect financing is negatively correlated with per capita carbon emissions in developed countries while it is positively correlated in developing economies. We also find out that the interaction between financial structure and total factor productivity is positively correlated with carbon emissions in developing countries; this finding requires attention in order to achieve green development.
- Published
- 2021
48. How financial intermediation impacts on financial stability?
- Author
-
José Américo Pereira Antunes, Adriano Rodrigues, and Claudio Oliveira De Moraes
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Financial stability ,05 social sciences ,Financial intermediary ,Financial system ,Variable (computer science) ,Financial regulation ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Financial crisis ,Financial analysis ,Cash flow ,Business ,050207 economics ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
The great financial crisis widened the role of financial intermediation in financial stability. This study develops a new financial intermediation variable, credit cash flow (CCF), which enables me...
- Published
- 2017
49. Information asymmetry and conditional financial sector development
- Author
-
Jacinta C. Nwachukwu and Simplice A. Asongu
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Financial sector development ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Accounting management ,Information sharing ,05 social sciences ,Financial ratio ,Financial system ,Financial development ,Information asymmetry ,Originality ,Indirect finance ,Blanket policy ,Value (economics) ,0502 economics and business ,Financial analysis ,Economics ,Business ,050207 economics ,Empirical evidence ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this study is to examine the role of reducing information asymmetry (IA) on conditional financial sector development in 53 African countries for the period 2004-2011.Design/methodology/approachThe empirical evidence is based on contemporary and non-contemporary quantile regressions. Instruments for reducing IA include public credit registries (PCRs) and private credit bureaus (PCBs). Hitherto unexplored dimensions of financial sector development are used, namely, financial sector dynamics of formalization, informalization, semi-formalization and non-formalization.FindingsThe following findings are established. First, the positive (negative) effect of information sharing offices (ISO) on formal (informal) financial development is consistent with theory. Second, ISOs consistently increase formal financial development, with the incidence of PCRs higher in terms of magnitude, and financial sector formalization, with the impact of PCBs higher for the most part. Third, only PCBs significantly decrease informal financial development and both ISOs decrease financial sector informalization. Policy implications are discussed.Originality/valueThe study assesses the effect of reducing IA on financial development when existing levels of it matter because current studies based on mean values of financial development provide blanket policy implications which are unlikely to be effective unless they are contingent on prevailing levels of financial development and tailored differently across countries with high, intermediate and low initial levels of financial development.
- Published
- 2017
50. A study of contagion in the financial system from the perspective of network analytics
- Author
-
Stephen Shaoyi Liao, Xian Cheng, and Ji Wu
- Subjects
050208 finance ,Financial contagion ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Financial risk ,05 social sciences ,Financial system ,Computer Science Applications ,Financial regulation ,Artificial Intelligence ,Indirect finance ,0502 economics and business ,Systemic risk ,Economics ,Financial modeling ,Balance sheet ,050207 economics ,Robustness (economics) - Abstract
The increase in the frequency and scope of financial crises has made the stability and robustness of the financial system a major concern in the field of finance worldwide. Due to the interconnectedness between institutions, the negative effects of financial crises spread through the financial system in a process referred to as financial contagion. In this study, we focus on a financial system in which large numbers of financial institutions are connected by direct balance sheet linkages through their lending-borrowing relationships. We mainly focus on modeling and analyzing financial contagion from a network analytics perspective. First, we model the financial system and the mechanism of contagion by introducing the concepts of exposure matrix, book value, market value and liquidation cost. Second, we propose a simple contagion algorithm based on this modeling process. Third, we study the effects of the financial system's heterogeneity on the magnitude of financial contagion by applying the proposed algorithm. The level of heterogeneity is measured by the diversification of exposure ratio and the extent of network connectivity. According to the results of our comprehensive numerical simulation, we conclude that an increase in heterogeneity has a significant influence on the stability of the financial system. Our study has significant implications for the practice of financial regulation and surveillance.
- Published
- 2017
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