Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises
The study provides two recent analyses, spurred by the recent East Asian crisis, of government responses to financial distress, and, also presents a comprehensive database on systemic, and borderline banking crises. In the first chapter, the authors review the tradeoffs involved in public policies for systemic, financial, and corporate sector restructuring. They find that consistent policies are crucial for success, though such consistency is often missing. This consistency covers many dimensions, and entails among other things, ensuring that there are sufficient resources for absorbing losses, and, that private agents face appropriate incentives for restructuring. The authors also find that sustainable restructuring, requires deep structural reforms, facing upfront, political economy factors. In the second chapter, the authors use cross-country evidence to determine whether specific crisis containment, and resolution policies, systematically influence the fiscal costs of resolving a crisis. They find that accommodating policies - such as blanket deposit guarantees, debtor bailouts, and regulatory forbearance, etc. - significantly increase fiscal costs. The third chapter, is a comprehensive database on systemic banking crises that have occurred since the late 1970s. The database also includes information on borderline (non-systemic) banking crises during the same period.
id |
dig-okr-1098614057 |
---|---|
record_format |
koha |
spelling |
dig-okr-10986140572024-08-08T17:56:04Z Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises Klingbiel, Daniela Laeven, Luc Klingbiel, Daniela Laeven, Luc ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSET PRICES ASSET SALES AUTHORITY BANK CREDIBILITY BANK CRISES BANK MANAGEMENT BANK RESTRUCTURING BANKING CRISES BANKING CRISIS BANKING SECTOR BANKRUPTCY BANKRUPTCY LAWS BANKS BLANKET DEPOSIT GUARANTEES CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL ADEQUACY RULES CAPITAL BASE CAPITAL FLOWS COMPETITIVENESS CONTAINMENT PHASE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING CORPORATE SECTOR COURT RESTRUCTURING CURRENCY CRISES DEBT DEBT OVERHANG DEPOSIT GUARANTEES DEPOSITORS DEPOSITS DISCLOSURE ECONOMIC GROWTH EMERGING MARKETS EMPLOYMENT ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE FINANCIAL DISTRESS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTORS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FINANCIAL SYSTEMS FISCAL FISCAL COSTS FISCAL POLICY FISCAL RESOURCES FOREIGN ENTRY FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS FRAUD GAMBLING GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS GOVERNMENT EQUITY GOVERNMENT POLICIES GOVERNMENT RESOURCES HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVE FRAMEWORK INFLATION INSOLVENCY INSOLVENCY SYSTEM INSOLVENT INSOLVENT BANKS INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL WEAKNESSES INTEREST RATES JUDICIARY LAWS LIQUIDATION LIQUIDITY LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOOTING LOSS ALLOCATION MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET ECONOMY MARKET VALUE MATURITIES MICROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY MORAL HAZARD NATIONAL ECONOMY NONPERFORMING LOANS PENALTIES POLITICAL ECONOMY PRIVATIZATION PROFITABILITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC POLICIES PUBLIC SECTOR REAL SECTOR RECAPITALIZATION REGULATORY FORBEARANCE REGULATORY INTERVENTION REHABILITATION REORGANIZATION RESERVE REQUIREMENT RISK SHARING RISK TAKING RUNS ON BANKS SAFETY NETS SENATE SHAREHOLDERS SOCIAL SERVICES SUBSIDIARIES SYSTEMIC BANKING CRISES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT WAGES WORKING CAPITAL The study provides two recent analyses, spurred by the recent East Asian crisis, of government responses to financial distress, and, also presents a comprehensive database on systemic, and borderline banking crises. In the first chapter, the authors review the tradeoffs involved in public policies for systemic, financial, and corporate sector restructuring. They find that consistent policies are crucial for success, though such consistency is often missing. This consistency covers many dimensions, and entails among other things, ensuring that there are sufficient resources for absorbing losses, and, that private agents face appropriate incentives for restructuring. The authors also find that sustainable restructuring, requires deep structural reforms, facing upfront, political economy factors. In the second chapter, the authors use cross-country evidence to determine whether specific crisis containment, and resolution policies, systematically influence the fiscal costs of resolving a crisis. They find that accommodating policies - such as blanket deposit guarantees, debtor bailouts, and regulatory forbearance, etc. - significantly increase fiscal costs. The third chapter, is a comprehensive database on systemic banking crises that have occurred since the late 1970s. The database also includes information on borderline (non-systemic) banking crises during the same period. 2013-06-20T15:44:05Z 2013-06-20T15:44:05Z 2002-01 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/01/1717448/managing-real-fiscal-effects-banking-crises 0-8213-5056-0 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14057 English en_US World Bank Discussion Paper;No. 428 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank |
institution |
Banco Mundial |
collection |
DSpace |
country |
Estados Unidos |
countrycode |
US |
component |
Bibliográfico |
access |
En linea |
databasecode |
dig-okr |
tag |
biblioteca |
region |
America del Norte |
libraryname |
Biblioteca del Banco Mundial |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSET PRICES ASSET SALES AUTHORITY BANK CREDIBILITY BANK CRISES BANK MANAGEMENT BANK RESTRUCTURING BANKING CRISES BANKING CRISIS BANKING SECTOR BANKRUPTCY BANKRUPTCY LAWS BANKS BLANKET DEPOSIT GUARANTEES CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL ADEQUACY RULES CAPITAL BASE CAPITAL FLOWS COMPETITIVENESS CONTAINMENT PHASE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING CORPORATE SECTOR COURT RESTRUCTURING CURRENCY CRISES DEBT DEBT OVERHANG DEPOSIT GUARANTEES DEPOSITORS DEPOSITS DISCLOSURE ECONOMIC GROWTH EMERGING MARKETS EMPLOYMENT ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE FINANCIAL DISTRESS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTORS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FINANCIAL SYSTEMS FISCAL FISCAL COSTS FISCAL POLICY FISCAL RESOURCES FOREIGN ENTRY FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS FRAUD GAMBLING GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS GOVERNMENT EQUITY GOVERNMENT POLICIES GOVERNMENT RESOURCES HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVE FRAMEWORK INFLATION INSOLVENCY INSOLVENCY SYSTEM INSOLVENT INSOLVENT BANKS INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL WEAKNESSES INTEREST RATES JUDICIARY LAWS LIQUIDATION LIQUIDITY LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOOTING LOSS ALLOCATION MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET ECONOMY MARKET VALUE MATURITIES MICROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY MORAL HAZARD NATIONAL ECONOMY NONPERFORMING LOANS PENALTIES POLITICAL ECONOMY PRIVATIZATION PROFITABILITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC POLICIES PUBLIC SECTOR REAL SECTOR RECAPITALIZATION REGULATORY FORBEARANCE REGULATORY INTERVENTION REHABILITATION REORGANIZATION RESERVE REQUIREMENT RISK SHARING RISK TAKING RUNS ON BANKS SAFETY NETS SENATE SHAREHOLDERS SOCIAL SERVICES SUBSIDIARIES SYSTEMIC BANKING CRISES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT WAGES WORKING CAPITAL ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSET PRICES ASSET SALES AUTHORITY BANK CREDIBILITY BANK CRISES BANK MANAGEMENT BANK RESTRUCTURING BANKING CRISES BANKING CRISIS BANKING SECTOR BANKRUPTCY BANKRUPTCY LAWS BANKS BLANKET DEPOSIT GUARANTEES CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL ADEQUACY RULES CAPITAL BASE CAPITAL FLOWS COMPETITIVENESS CONTAINMENT PHASE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING CORPORATE SECTOR COURT RESTRUCTURING CURRENCY CRISES DEBT DEBT OVERHANG DEPOSIT GUARANTEES DEPOSITORS DEPOSITS DISCLOSURE ECONOMIC GROWTH EMERGING MARKETS EMPLOYMENT ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE FINANCIAL DISTRESS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTORS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FINANCIAL SYSTEMS FISCAL FISCAL COSTS FISCAL POLICY FISCAL RESOURCES FOREIGN ENTRY FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS FRAUD GAMBLING GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS GOVERNMENT EQUITY GOVERNMENT POLICIES GOVERNMENT RESOURCES HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVE FRAMEWORK INFLATION INSOLVENCY INSOLVENCY SYSTEM INSOLVENT INSOLVENT BANKS INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL WEAKNESSES INTEREST RATES JUDICIARY LAWS LIQUIDATION LIQUIDITY LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOOTING LOSS ALLOCATION MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET ECONOMY MARKET VALUE MATURITIES MICROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY MORAL HAZARD NATIONAL ECONOMY NONPERFORMING LOANS PENALTIES POLITICAL ECONOMY PRIVATIZATION PROFITABILITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC POLICIES PUBLIC SECTOR REAL SECTOR RECAPITALIZATION REGULATORY FORBEARANCE REGULATORY INTERVENTION REHABILITATION REORGANIZATION RESERVE REQUIREMENT RISK SHARING RISK TAKING RUNS ON BANKS SAFETY NETS SENATE SHAREHOLDERS SOCIAL SERVICES SUBSIDIARIES SYSTEMIC BANKING CRISES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT WAGES WORKING CAPITAL |
spellingShingle |
ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSET PRICES ASSET SALES AUTHORITY BANK CREDIBILITY BANK CRISES BANK MANAGEMENT BANK RESTRUCTURING BANKING CRISES BANKING CRISIS BANKING SECTOR BANKRUPTCY BANKRUPTCY LAWS BANKS BLANKET DEPOSIT GUARANTEES CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL ADEQUACY RULES CAPITAL BASE CAPITAL FLOWS COMPETITIVENESS CONTAINMENT PHASE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING CORPORATE SECTOR COURT RESTRUCTURING CURRENCY CRISES DEBT DEBT OVERHANG DEPOSIT GUARANTEES DEPOSITORS DEPOSITS DISCLOSURE ECONOMIC GROWTH EMERGING MARKETS EMPLOYMENT ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE FINANCIAL DISTRESS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTORS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FINANCIAL SYSTEMS FISCAL FISCAL COSTS FISCAL POLICY FISCAL RESOURCES FOREIGN ENTRY FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS FRAUD GAMBLING GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS GOVERNMENT EQUITY GOVERNMENT POLICIES GOVERNMENT RESOURCES HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVE FRAMEWORK INFLATION INSOLVENCY INSOLVENCY SYSTEM INSOLVENT INSOLVENT BANKS INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL WEAKNESSES INTEREST RATES JUDICIARY LAWS LIQUIDATION LIQUIDITY LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOOTING LOSS ALLOCATION MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET ECONOMY MARKET VALUE MATURITIES MICROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY MORAL HAZARD NATIONAL ECONOMY NONPERFORMING LOANS PENALTIES POLITICAL ECONOMY PRIVATIZATION PROFITABILITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC POLICIES PUBLIC SECTOR REAL SECTOR RECAPITALIZATION REGULATORY FORBEARANCE REGULATORY INTERVENTION REHABILITATION REORGANIZATION RESERVE REQUIREMENT RISK SHARING RISK TAKING RUNS ON BANKS SAFETY NETS SENATE SHAREHOLDERS SOCIAL SERVICES SUBSIDIARIES SYSTEMIC BANKING CRISES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT WAGES WORKING CAPITAL ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSET PRICES ASSET SALES AUTHORITY BANK CREDIBILITY BANK CRISES BANK MANAGEMENT BANK RESTRUCTURING BANKING CRISES BANKING CRISIS BANKING SECTOR BANKRUPTCY BANKRUPTCY LAWS BANKS BLANKET DEPOSIT GUARANTEES CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL ADEQUACY RULES CAPITAL BASE CAPITAL FLOWS COMPETITIVENESS CONTAINMENT PHASE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING CORPORATE SECTOR COURT RESTRUCTURING CURRENCY CRISES DEBT DEBT OVERHANG DEPOSIT GUARANTEES DEPOSITORS DEPOSITS DISCLOSURE ECONOMIC GROWTH EMERGING MARKETS EMPLOYMENT ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE FINANCIAL DISTRESS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTORS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FINANCIAL SYSTEMS FISCAL FISCAL COSTS FISCAL POLICY FISCAL RESOURCES FOREIGN ENTRY FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS FRAUD GAMBLING GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS GOVERNMENT EQUITY GOVERNMENT POLICIES GOVERNMENT RESOURCES HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVE FRAMEWORK INFLATION INSOLVENCY INSOLVENCY SYSTEM INSOLVENT INSOLVENT BANKS INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL WEAKNESSES INTEREST RATES JUDICIARY LAWS LIQUIDATION LIQUIDITY LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOOTING LOSS ALLOCATION MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET ECONOMY MARKET VALUE MATURITIES MICROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY MORAL HAZARD NATIONAL ECONOMY NONPERFORMING LOANS PENALTIES POLITICAL ECONOMY PRIVATIZATION PROFITABILITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC POLICIES PUBLIC SECTOR REAL SECTOR RECAPITALIZATION REGULATORY FORBEARANCE REGULATORY INTERVENTION REHABILITATION REORGANIZATION RESERVE REQUIREMENT RISK SHARING RISK TAKING RUNS ON BANKS SAFETY NETS SENATE SHAREHOLDERS SOCIAL SERVICES SUBSIDIARIES SYSTEMIC BANKING CRISES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT WAGES WORKING CAPITAL Klingbiel, Daniela Laeven, Luc Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises |
description |
The study provides two recent analyses,
spurred by the recent East Asian crisis, of government
responses to financial distress, and, also presents a
comprehensive database on systemic, and borderline banking
crises. In the first chapter, the authors review the
tradeoffs involved in public policies for systemic,
financial, and corporate sector restructuring. They find
that consistent policies are crucial for success, though
such consistency is often missing. This consistency covers
many dimensions, and entails among other things, ensuring
that there are sufficient resources for absorbing losses,
and, that private agents face appropriate incentives for
restructuring. The authors also find that sustainable
restructuring, requires deep structural reforms, facing
upfront, political economy factors. In the second chapter,
the authors use cross-country evidence to determine whether
specific crisis containment, and resolution policies,
systematically influence the fiscal costs of resolving a
crisis. They find that accommodating policies - such as
blanket deposit guarantees, debtor bailouts, and regulatory
forbearance, etc. - significantly increase fiscal costs. The
third chapter, is a comprehensive database on systemic
banking crises that have occurred since the late 1970s. The
database also includes information on borderline
(non-systemic) banking crises during the same period. |
author2 |
Klingbiel, Daniela |
author_facet |
Klingbiel, Daniela Klingbiel, Daniela Laeven, Luc |
topic_facet |
ASSET MANAGEMENT ASSET PRICES ASSET SALES AUTHORITY BANK CREDIBILITY BANK CRISES BANK MANAGEMENT BANK RESTRUCTURING BANKING CRISES BANKING CRISIS BANKING SECTOR BANKRUPTCY BANKRUPTCY LAWS BANKS BLANKET DEPOSIT GUARANTEES CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL ADEQUACY RULES CAPITAL BASE CAPITAL FLOWS COMPETITIVENESS CONTAINMENT PHASE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING CORPORATE SECTOR COURT RESTRUCTURING CURRENCY CRISES DEBT DEBT OVERHANG DEPOSIT GUARANTEES DEPOSITORS DEPOSITS DISCLOSURE ECONOMIC GROWTH EMERGING MARKETS EMPLOYMENT ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE FINANCIAL DISTRESS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTORS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FINANCIAL SYSTEMS FISCAL FISCAL COSTS FISCAL POLICY FISCAL RESOURCES FOREIGN ENTRY FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS FRAUD GAMBLING GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS GOVERNMENT EQUITY GOVERNMENT POLICIES GOVERNMENT RESOURCES HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVE FRAMEWORK INFLATION INSOLVENCY INSOLVENCY SYSTEM INSOLVENT INSOLVENT BANKS INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL WEAKNESSES INTEREST RATES JUDICIARY LAWS LIQUIDATION LIQUIDITY LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOOTING LOSS ALLOCATION MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET ECONOMY MARKET VALUE MATURITIES MICROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY MORAL HAZARD NATIONAL ECONOMY NONPERFORMING LOANS PENALTIES POLITICAL ECONOMY PRIVATIZATION PROFITABILITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC POLICIES PUBLIC SECTOR REAL SECTOR RECAPITALIZATION REGULATORY FORBEARANCE REGULATORY INTERVENTION REHABILITATION REORGANIZATION RESERVE REQUIREMENT RISK SHARING RISK TAKING RUNS ON BANKS SAFETY NETS SENATE SHAREHOLDERS SOCIAL SERVICES SUBSIDIARIES SYSTEMIC BANKING CRISES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT WAGES WORKING CAPITAL |
author |
Klingbiel, Daniela Laeven, Luc |
author_sort |
Klingbiel, Daniela |
title |
Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises |
title_short |
Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises |
title_full |
Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises |
title_fullStr |
Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises |
title_full_unstemmed |
Managing the Real and Fiscal Effects of Banking Crises |
title_sort |
managing the real and fiscal effects of banking crises |
publisher |
Washington, DC: World Bank |
publishDate |
2002-01 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/01/1717448/managing-real-fiscal-effects-banking-crises https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14057 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT klingbieldaniela managingtherealandfiscaleffectsofbankingcrises AT laevenluc managingtherealandfiscaleffectsofbankingcrises |
_version_ |
1807157691823423488 |