Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges
This paper reviews lessons learned from financial crises; describes the channels of transmissions of economic booms and busts in crisis vulnerable economies; and highlights the central role of external factors, credit and the mitigating role of the public sector, with a broad focus on the impact on...
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16339 |
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okr-10986-163392021-04-23T14:03:28Z Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges Guerschanik Calvo, Sara credit allocation risk management booms and busts mitigation financial crises coping strategies household impact macrofinancial-risk management public service-risk management micro-risk management economic adjustment transmission of economic shock migrant remittances earnings deceleration This paper reviews lessons learned from financial crises; describes the channels of transmissions of economic booms and busts in crisis vulnerable economies; and highlights the central role of external factors, credit and the mitigating role of the public sector, with a broad focus on the impact on the poor from developing countries. Financial crises increase poverty, may increase income inequality and may deteriorate human development indicators such as health and education. Public sector credit and international reserves have proven effective in preventing a fully-fledged financial crisis, as has concurrent external support, though these mitigating actions have not been effective in preventing a drop in gross domestic product (GDP) even in economies perceived to be well managed such as Chile in 1999-2000 and 2009. While public banks provide an additional tool for crisis management in the short run, credit misallocation and efficiency losses due to politically motivated lending are still widespread. 2013-12-02T21:28:30Z 2013-12-02T21:28:30Z 2013-09-23 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16339 en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research Latin America & Caribbean |
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Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
en_US |
topic |
credit allocation risk management booms and busts mitigation financial crises coping strategies household impact macrofinancial-risk management public service-risk management micro-risk management economic adjustment transmission of economic shock migrant remittances earnings deceleration |
spellingShingle |
credit allocation risk management booms and busts mitigation financial crises coping strategies household impact macrofinancial-risk management public service-risk management micro-risk management economic adjustment transmission of economic shock migrant remittances earnings deceleration Guerschanik Calvo, Sara Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges |
geographic_facet |
Latin America & Caribbean |
description |
This paper reviews lessons learned from financial crises; describes the channels of transmissions of economic booms and busts in crisis vulnerable economies; and highlights the central role of external factors, credit and the mitigating role of the public sector, with a broad focus on the impact on the poor from developing countries. Financial crises increase poverty, may increase income inequality and may deteriorate human development indicators such as health and education. Public sector credit and international reserves have proven effective in preventing a fully-fledged financial crisis, as has concurrent external support, though these mitigating actions have not been effective in preventing a drop in gross domestic product (GDP) even in economies perceived to be well managed such as Chile in 1999-2000 and 2009. While public banks provide an additional tool for crisis management in the short run, credit misallocation and efficiency losses due to politically motivated lending are still widespread. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Working Paper |
author |
Guerschanik Calvo, Sara |
author_facet |
Guerschanik Calvo, Sara |
author_sort |
Guerschanik Calvo, Sara |
title |
Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges |
title_short |
Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges |
title_full |
Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges |
title_fullStr |
Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges |
title_full_unstemmed |
Financial Crises, Social Impact, and Risk Management : Lessons and Challenges |
title_sort |
financial crises, social impact, and risk management : lessons and challenges |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16339 |
_version_ |
1764432903881621504 |