Cargando…

Global Financial Development Report 2013 : Rethinking the Role of the State in Finance.

Global Financial Development Report 2013 is the first in a new World Bank series. It provides a unique contribution to financial sector policy debates, building on novel data, surveys, research, and wide-ranging country experience, with emphasis on emerging-market and developing economies. The globa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Bank, World
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Washington : World Bank Publications, 2012.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations and Glossary; Overview; BOXES; O.1 Main Messages of This Report; O.2 Views from Some of the World Bank Clients; FIGURES; O.1 Benchmarking Financial Development, 2008-10; O.3 Navigating This Report; O.2 Selected Features That Distinguish Crisis-Hit Countries; O.3 Market Power and Systemic Risk; O.4 Change in Bank Lending Associated with a 1% Increase in GDP Per Capita; O.5 Credit Reporting vs. Banking System Concentration; 1 Benchmarking Financial Systems around the World; 1.1 Financial Depth and Income Inequality.
  • 1.2 Socioeconomic Development, Financial Development, and Enabling EnvironmentTABLES; 1.1 Stylized 4x2 Matrix of Financial System Characteristics (with examples of candidate variables in each category); 1.1 Selecting the Representative Variables for Individual Characteristics; 1.3 Correlations between Characteristics in Same Category (example); 1.2 To Aggregate or Not; 1.4 Correlations among Financial System Characteristics; 1.2 Financial System Characteristics: Summary; 1.5 Financial System Characteristics, by Income Group, 2010; 1.6 The Uneven Nature of Financial Systems (Illustration).
  • 1.7 Financial Systems: 2008-10 versus 2000-07 (Financial Institutions)1.8 Financial Systems: 2008-10 versus 2000-07 (Financial Markets); 1.3 China Case Study: Large Banks and the Need to Diversify to Markets; B1.3.1 The Chinese Financial Sector; 1.4 Romania Case Study: Rapid Growth Enabled by Foreign Funding; B1.4.1 Romania's Financial Sector; 2 The State as Regulator and Supervisor; 2.1 Distorted Incentives: Subprime Crisis and Cross-Border Supervision; 2.1 Examples of Weak Supervisory Capacity Identified in the FSAP; 2.2 What Is in the World Bank's Bank Regulation and Supervision Survey?
  • MAPSB2.2.1 Coverage of the 2011 Bank Regulation and Supervision Survey; 2.2 Differences between Crisis and Noncrisis Countries; 2.3 Summary of the Basel III Framework; 2.3 Reforming Credit Rating Agencies; 2.1 Introduction of Bank Governance Frameworks; 2.2 New Insolvency Frameworks; 2.3 Introduction of Deposit Protection Schemes; 2.4 Institutional Structures for Regulation and Supervision; 2.4 Financial Stability Reporting and Stress Test Publication, 1995-2011; 2.5 Push to Implement New Basel Rules; 2.6 Impact of the Move to Basel II; 2.7 Quality of Capital.
  • 2.8 Capital Adequacy Ratios: Minimum and Actual2.5 Impact of the Basel III Implementation in Developing Economies; B2.5.1 EMDEs: The Impact of Basel III Capital and Liquidity Requirements; 2.4 Summary of Selected Proposals for Regulatory Reform; 2.6 Accounting Standards (Viewpoint by Nicolas Véron); 2.7 Incentive Audits (Viewpoint by Martin Čihák, Asli Demirgüç-Kunt, and R. Barry Johnston); 2.8 Regulatory Discipline and Market Discipline: Opposites or Complements?; 3 The Role of the State in Promoting Bank Competition; 3.1 Two Views on the Link between Competition and Stability.