Prevention and crisis management : lessons for Asia from the 2008 crisis
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RT Generic T1 Prevention and crisis management : lessons for Asia from the 2008 crisis A1 UN.ESCAP, YR 2013-05 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4775 PB UN.ESCAP AB <p>By Rosefielde, Steven, Masaaki Kuboniwa, and Satoshi Mizobata The book draws the lesson from the crisis that economic booms need to be carefully monitored especially when they result from deficit spending, expansionary monetary policies, financial deregulation and mercantilist trade policies. Have we learned the lessons? Steven Rosefielde adds that merely imposing stronger financial regulation and modestly tightening the short-term budget will not prevent recurring crises. Instead, a more comprehensive solution should include structural reform of governance and establishment of monitoring agencies that oversee speculation and potential bubbles. As the world becomes more interconnected and China rises as the second largest economy in the world, future financial crises may be more complicated and have even bigger impacts on the global economy. Overall, measures for preventing and managing crises should consider not only domestic circumstances, but also global imbalances.</p> OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - Prevention and crisis management : lessons for Asia from the 2008 crisis AU - UN.ESCAP Y1 - 2013-05 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4775 PB - UN.ESCAP AB -By Rosefielde, Steven, Masaaki Kuboniwa, and Satoshi Mizobata The book draws the lesson from the crisis that economic booms need to be carefully monitored especially when they result from deficit spending, expansionary monetary policies, financial deregulation and mercantilist trade policies. Have we learned the lessons? Steven Rosefielde adds that merely imposing stronger financial regulation and modestly tightening the short-term budget will not prevent recurring crises. Instead, a more comprehensive solution should include structural reform of governance and establishment of monitoring agencies that oversee speculation and potential bubbles. As the world becomes more interconnected and China rises as the second largest economy in the world, future financial crises may be more complicated and have even bigger impacts on the global economy. Overall, measures for preventing and managing crises should consider not only domestic circumstances, but also global imbalances.
@misc{20.500.12870_4775 author = {UN.ESCAP}, title = {Prevention and crisis management : lessons for Asia from the 2008 crisis}, year = {2013-05}, abstract = {By Rosefielde, Steven, Masaaki Kuboniwa, and Satoshi Mizobata The book draws the lesson from the crisis that economic booms need to be carefully monitored especially when they result from deficit spending, expansionary monetary policies, financial deregulation and mercantilist trade policies. Have we learned the lessons? Steven Rosefielde adds that merely imposing stronger financial regulation and modestly tightening the short-term budget will not prevent recurring crises. Instead, a more comprehensive solution should include structural reform of governance and establishment of monitoring agencies that oversee speculation and potential bubbles. As the world becomes more interconnected and China rises as the second largest economy in the world, future financial crises may be more complicated and have even bigger impacts on the global economy. Overall, measures for preventing and managing crises should consider not only domestic circumstances, but also global imbalances.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4775} } @misc{20.500.12870_4775 author = {UN.ESCAP}, title = {Prevention and crisis management : lessons for Asia from the 2008 crisis}, year = {2013-05}, abstract = {By Rosefielde, Steven, Masaaki Kuboniwa, and Satoshi Mizobata The book draws the lesson from the crisis that economic booms need to be carefully monitored especially when they result from deficit spending, expansionary monetary policies, financial deregulation and mercantilist trade policies. Have we learned the lessons? Steven Rosefielde adds that merely imposing stronger financial regulation and modestly tightening the short-term budget will not prevent recurring crises. Instead, a more comprehensive solution should include structural reform of governance and establishment of monitoring agencies that oversee speculation and potential bubbles. As the world becomes more interconnected and China rises as the second largest economy in the world, future financial crises may be more complicated and have even bigger impacts on the global economy. Overall, measures for preventing and managing crises should consider not only domestic circumstances, but also global imbalances.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4775} } TY - GEN T1 - Prevention and crisis management : lessons for Asia from the 2008 crisis AU - UN.ESCAP UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4775 PB - UN.ESCAP AB -By Rosefielde, Steven, Masaaki Kuboniwa, and Satoshi Mizobata The book draws the lesson from the crisis that economic booms need to be carefully monitored especially when they result from deficit spending, expansionary monetary policies, financial deregulation and mercantilist trade policies. Have we learned the lessons? Steven Rosefielde adds that merely imposing stronger financial regulation and modestly tightening the short-term budget will not prevent recurring crises. Instead, a more comprehensive solution should include structural reform of governance and establishment of monitoring agencies that oversee speculation and potential bubbles. As the world becomes more interconnected and China rises as the second largest economy in the world, future financial crises may be more complicated and have even bigger impacts on the global economy. Overall, measures for preventing and managing crises should consider not only domestic circumstances, but also global imbalances.
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11, May 2013
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By Rosefielde, Steven, Masaaki Kuboniwa, and Satoshi Mizobata The book draws the lesson from the crisis that economic booms need to be carefully monitored especially when they result from deficit spending, expansionary monetary policies, financial deregulation and mercantilist trade policies. Have we learned the lessons? Steven Rosefielde adds that merely imposing stronger financial regulation and modestly tightening the short-term budget will not prevent recurring crises. Instead, a more comprehensive solution should include structural reform of governance and establishment of monitoring agencies that oversee speculation and potential bubbles. As the world becomes more interconnected and China rises as the second largest economy in the world, future financial crises may be more complicated and have even bigger impacts on the global economy. Overall, measures for preventing and managing crises should consider not only domestic circumstances, but also global imbalances.