Stages of the Ongoing Global Financial Crisis: Is There a Wandering Asset Bubble?
Lucjan T. Orlowski
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 11,
2008
Abstract
This study argues that the severity of the current global financial crisis is strongly influenced by changeable allocations of the global savings. This process is named a “wandering asset bubble”. Since its original outbreak induced by the demise of the subprime mortgage market and the mortgage-backed securities in the U.S., this crisis has reverberated across other credit areas, structured financial products and global financial institutions. Four distinctive stages of the crisis are identified: the meltdown of the subprime mortgage market, spillovers into broader credit market, the liquidity crisis epitomized by the fallout of Bear Sterns with some contagion effects on other financial institutions, and the commodity price bubble. Monetary policy responses aimed at stabilizing financial markets are proposed.
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Inflation and relative price variability in the euro area: evidence from a panel threshold model
Dieter Nautz, Juliane Scharff
Bundesbank Discussion Paper, No. 14/2006,
2006
Abstract
In recent macroeconomic theory, relative price variability (RPV) generates the
central distortions of inflation. This paper provides first evidence on the empirical
relation between inflation and RPV in the euro area focusing on threshold effects
of inflation. We find that expected inflation significantly increases RPV if inflation
is either very low (below -1.38% p.a.) or very high (above 5.94% p.a.). In the
intermediate regime, however, expected inflation has no distorting effects which
supports price stability as an outcome of optimal monetary policy.
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Bank Market Discipline
Reint E. Gropp, M. Schleicher
ECB Monthly Bulletin,
2005
Abstract
This article reviews the conceptual issues surrounding market discipline for banks and describes to what extent market discipline could complement supervisory activities. The potential of market discipline has been explicitly recognised in the New Basel Accord. In addition to capital requirements (Pillar I) and supervisory review (Pillar II), the Accord provides for a greater role of financial markets in complementing traditional supervisory activities by asking banks for increased transparency with regard to their operations (Pillar III). This article puts Pillar III in the broader context of direct and indirect market discipline. It is argued that both direct and indirect market discipline should be enhanced by the transparency requirements of the New Capital Accord, but that other conditions may also need to be met in order for market discipline to become more effective. Nevertheless, the article also shows that aggregated market prices can play a useful role in monitoring banking sector stability.
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Investment, Financial Markets, New Economy Dynamics and Growth in Transition Countries
Albrecht Kauffmann, P. J. J. Welfens
Economic Opening Up and Growth in Russia: Finance, Trade, Market Institutions, and Energy,
2004
Abstract
The transition to a market economy in the former CMEA area is more than a decade old and one can clearly distinguish a group of relatively fast growing countries — including Estonia, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovenia — and a majority of slowly growing economies, including Russia and the Ukraine. Initial problems of transition were natural in the sense that systemic transition to a market economy has effectively destroyed part of the existing capital stock that was no longer profitable under the new relative prices imported from world markets; and there was a transitory inflationary push as low state-administered prices were replaced by higher market equilibrium prices. Indeed, systemic transformation in eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have brought serious transitory inflation problems and a massive transition recession; negative growth rates have continued over many years in some countries, including Russia and the Ukraine, where output growth was negative throughout the 1990s (except for Russia, which recorded slight growth in 1997). For political and economic reasons the economic performance of Russia is of particular relevance for the success of the overall transition process. If Russia would face stagnation and instability, this would undermine political and economic stability in the whole of Europe and prospects for integrating Russia into the world economy.
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Recent Developments and Risks in the Euro Area Banking Sector
Reint E. Gropp, Jukka M. Vesala
ECB Monthly Bulletin,
2002
Abstract
This article provides an overview of euro area banks’ exposure to risk and examines the effects of the cyclical downturn in 2001. It describes the extent to which euro area banks’ risk profile has changed as a result of recent structural developments, such as an increase in investment banking, mergers, securitisation and more sophisticated risk management techniques. The article stresses that the environment in which banks operated in 2001 was fairly complex due to the relatively weak economic performance of all major economies as well as the events of 11 September in the United States. It evaluates the effects of these adverse circumstances on banks’ stability and overall performance. The article provides bank balance sheet information as well as financial market prices, arguing that the latter may be useful when assessing the soundness of the banking sector in a forward-looking manner. It concludes with a review of the overall stability of euro area banks, pointing to robustness in the face of the adverse developments in 2001 and the somewhat improved forward-looking indicators of banks’ financial strength in early 2002.
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Higher external economic risks for growth price stability in Poland
Martina Kämpfe
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 6,
1998
Abstract
Im vergangenen Jahr setzte sich das hohe Wirtschaftswachstum in Polen fort: Das reale Bruttoinlandsprodukt stieg um 7 vH. Gleichzeitig konnte die Inflationsrate auf das anvisierte Niveau von etwa 15 vH reduziert werden. Dem hohen Wachstum und den Fortschritten bei der Preisstabilisierung stand allerdings eine erhebliche Verschlechterung in der Zahlungsbilanz gegenüber: Das Leistungsbilanzdefizit verdreifachte sich im Vergleich zum Vorjahr, vor allem durch den weiteren Anstieg der Investitions- und Konsumgüterimporte, zugleich nahmen die spekulativen Kapitalzuflüsse zu.Die Geld- und Wechselkurspolitik konnte sowohl die starke Expansion der Importnachfrage als auch die gestiegenen Devisenzuflüsse nicht wirksam eindämmen. Im Ergebnis setzte sich die reale Aufwertung des Zloty gegenüber den Währungen
der Haupthandelspartner fort. 1998 werden die notwendig gewordenen Stabilisierungsbemühungen der Fiskal- und der Wechselkurspolitik das Wirtschaftswachstum etwas abschwächen. Die außenwirtschaftlichen Risiken bleiben bestehen, sofern
die Wirksamkeit der Geld- und Wechselkurspolitik auch 1998 beschränkt bleibt.
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The Polish national bank's tightrope walk between price level stabilization and securing strong economic growth
Thomas Linne
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 16,
1996
Abstract
Das relative starke Wirtschaftswachstum Polens wird von hartnäckigen Problemen bei der Stabilisierung des Preisniveaus begleitet. Der Zielkonflikt für die polnische Nationalbank besteht darin, die Zins- und Wechselkurspolitik so zu gestalten, dass sie einerseits eine moderatere Preissteigerungsrate erreicht, andererseits aber die Wachstumschancen nicht gefährdet.
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