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FINANCIAL MELTDOWN (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   086372


Asia faces the financial meltdown: Richard Grant discusses the position of Asia in the financial crisis and the implications for New Zealand / Grant, Richard   Journal Article
Grant, Richard Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract We all understand something of what has happened in the global economy, starting in the United States and spreading out from there.If at first people were reasonably confident that their own country would escape some of the consequences of the turmoil, it is clear that day by day, week by week, the evidence has been other.
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2
ID:   118186


European sovereign debt crisis: causes and implications / Ferdousi, Benuka   Journal Article
Ferdousi, Benuka Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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3
ID:   105866


Explanations of the financial meltdown and the present recessio / Mullard, Maurice   Journal Article
Mullard, Maurice Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract he concern of this article is to locate the unfolding literature that seeks to explain the present financial crisis into three dimensions of contestability. The major areas of disagreements between various authors include: the role of government; the issues of whether the recession was unavoidable or whether it was inevitable; and the area of ideas and ideals and how economic ideas shaped and influenced the policy process. These explanations include the pragmatists and all that literature that had a time dimension of major actors trying to produce policies that aimed to stabilise the financial markets. These policy makers did not have the benefit of hindsight but were concerned that the financial markets were so fragile that there was no other choice but for governments to intervene. By contrast, there were the market fundamentalists who argued that the pragmatists had got it wrong and were therefore highly critical of the Federal Reserve and the Treasury and tended to blame the recession on government housing policy. Institutionalists have argued that the regulatory system is broken, while structuralists tend to focus on growing income inequalities, the concentration of wealth and how the changing structure explains the recession in the sense that households took the avenue of higher debt on their homes to sustain higher levels of consumption. Finally, there is the Keynesian Collectivist argument that points to the limits of Rational Expectations and Efficient markets. No one really know who is right, but the fierce debate that is emerging is highly important in that each explanation seeks to provide a framework for policy making
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