Global financial development report. 2015/2016, Long-term finance.
Global Financial Development Report 2015/2016 focuses on the ability of financial systems to sustainably extend the maturity of financial contracts for private agents. The challenges of extending the maturity structure of finance are often considered to be at the core of effective, sustainable finan...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor Corporativo: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Washington, DC :
World Bank,
[2015]
|
Colección: | World Bank e-Library.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Contents; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations and Glossary; Overview; 1 Conceptual Framework, Stylized Facts, and the Role of the Government; 2 The Use of Long-Term Finance by Firms and Households: Determinants and Impact; 3 The Use of Markets for Long-Term Finance; 4 Banks and Nonbank Financial Institutions as Providers of Long-Term Finance; Statistical Appendixes; A: Basic Data on Financial System Characteristics, 2011-13; B: Key Aspects of Long-Term Finance; Bibliography; BOXES; O.1 Main Messages of This Report
- O.2 Practitioners' Views on Long-Term Finance: Global Financial Development BarometerO.3 The Role of Multilateral Development Banks in Mobilizing Long-Term Finance; O.4 Navigating This Report; 1.1 The Role of Infrastructure in Economic Development; 1.2 A Conceptual Framework for Understanding the Use of Long-Term Finance; 1.3 Intermediaries and Markets for Long-Term Finance; 1.4 Development Banks and Long-Term Finance: Two Different Approaches; 1.5 Using Credit Guarantees to Reduce the Risk of Long-Term Lending; 2.1 Firms' Long-Term Finance and Investment after the Global Financial Crisis
- 2.2 Did the Global Financial Crisis Affect Firms' Leverage and Debt Maturity?2.3 What Explains the Variation of Firm Debt Maturity across Countries?; 2.4 Contract Enforcement and Use of Long-Term Finance: Evidence from Debt Recovery Tribunals in India; 2.5 The Impact of Credit Information Sharing on Loan Maturity; 2.6 Information Asymmetries and Use of Long-Term Debt in the United States; 2.7 Short-Term Debt and Good Governance: Are They Substitutes or Complements?; 2.8 Political Connections and Firms' Use of Long-Term Debt in China; 2.9 The Rise of the Annuity Market in Chile
- 2.10 Sensitivity of Human Capital Investment to the Development of Credit Markets2.11 Housing Booms and Busts; 2.12 Benchmarking Housing Finance; 2.13 How do the Poor in Developing Countries Save?; 2.14 Changing Gambling Behavior through Experiential Learning; 3.1 Finance and Growth in China and India; 3.2 Infrastructure Finance and Public-Private Partnerships; 3.3 Supporting Local Currency Market Development; 3.4 Building Blocks for Domestic Corporate Bond Market Development; 3.5 Sukuk: An Alternative Financing Source
- 3.6 Macroeconomic Factors and Government Bond Markets in Developing Countries4.1 The Correlates of Long-Term Bank Lending; 4.2 The Basel III Framework; 4.3 What Drives Short-Termism in Chilean Mutual and Pension Funds?; 4.4 Institutional Investors in Equity Markets; 4.5 International Financial Institutions and PE Investments in Developing Countries; FIGURES; BO.2.1 Views on Policies to Promote Long-Term Finance; O.1 Firms' Median Long-Term Debt-to-Asset Ratios by Country Income Group and Firm Size, 2004-11, Country-Level Median