Banking Crises and Their Implications on the Financial System (2024)

Related Papers

Romanian Budgetary Consolidation Between European and Local

2008 •

Adina Gyorgy

The budgetary consolidation has become a current practice in Romania, but the ways in which it is realized and the consolidation rules take on only partially the standard procedure that are used at the European and world level. Furthermore, adapting the budgetary consolidation procedure has to do with components that are not part of the unitary public budgets system, analyzed by the definition given by the Law on public finance.

View PDF

Analysis Regarding the Israeli Pension Funds System

2008 •

paul tanasescu

View PDF

Theoretical and Applied Economics

The Impact Of Mergers And Acquisitions On The Economic Performances

This paper aims to measure the extent to which banking systems from Central and Eastern Europe have been characterized by banking consolidation through mergers and acquisitions and the extent to which this process led to the concentration of the banking ...

View PDF

The Governmental Policies That Encourage the Positive Contributions of the Foreign Direct Investments Inflows

2008 •

Viorela Iacovoiu

The maximization of the positive effects and the diminution of the costs associated to foreign direct investments depend mainly on the host country existing conditions and the applied government policies that may encourage the manifestation of some FDI contribution, simultaneously influencing the quality and quantity of the foreign capital inflows. As for the European integration, considering the positive evolutions recorded during the last years, we appreciate that in Romania as well, similar to other Central and Eastern European countries, the massive foreign capital input oriented towards activities incorporating a large number of local resources, mainly technology and knowledge, may encourage the improvement of the existing production factors quality and creation of some specialized production factors. In this respect, the long term development strategy must rely on the improvement of the human and technological capabilities, by making use of intelligent foreign direct investmen...

View PDF

Theoretical and Applied Economics

The Impact of the Country Rating on the Corporate Rating: Empirical Perspective in the Context of Financial Globalization

2008 •

Petre Brezeanu

View PDF

2008 •

Adrian Tanţău

Financing represents a central element of entrepreneurship. Financial resources allow developing new business projects and start up of activities of small enterprises. Unfortunately, the restrict credit politics for small enterprises and the absence of their resources represent important obstacle for implementation of new business ideas. In our research, we try to identify the main problems which oppose to the promotion of business ideas in small enterprises.

View PDF

Integration of Environmental Policy Into the European Energy Policy

2009 •

Dacinia Crina Petrescu

The idea of integrating the concept of sustainable development concept into the sectorial policies has been promoted in June 1998, at the European council from Cardiff, when a number of economic sector have been proposed for integrated approaching. The paper analyses the main operational objectives of integration the environment policy into the energy policy as well as instruments by which can achieve theses objective, respectively horizontal policy and sectorial policy.

View PDF

Theoretical and Applied …

Ethics And Responsibility In Banking. Opinions From The Romanian Market

2009 •

Mariana Nicolae

Downloadable! The paper presents the opinions of three banks present on the Romanian market (The Romanian Commercial Bank – BCR, Bancpost and Raiffeisen Bank) on ethical and social responsibility issues, resulted from a focus group organized by the authors. The issues ...

View PDF

Financial Crises. Aspects Regarding the Crisis Impact on the Romanian Capital Market

2011 •

Daniel Manate

Economic and financial stability, sustainability and durable development are top priorities to all world nations and this aspect must become no one for both European Union and Romania. Negative effects induced by the short time capital moves and of the different speculative assets bubbles must be restrained and strictly controlled by law and fiscal means. Those means must favour the

View PDF

Comparative European …

Subsidiarity as a Principle of Governance in the European Union

2004 •

Bertjan Verbeek

Subsidiarity has been introduced at the 1991 Maastricht conference as a principle of European governance. This article traces its development over the past 15 years and attempts to assess the effect of the subsidiarity principle on European governance. The impact of subsidiarity varies across time and across issue area. This is related to the fact that the European Union is at the same time characterized by inter-state relations and relations typical of a ‘regular’ political system. This specific nature of the European polity requires us to analyze policy-making in terms of different policy arenas which are sometimes inter-state in nature and sometimes more ‘regular’. This concept of European policy-making differs from the approaches currently dominating the field: intergovernmentalism and multi-level governance. Although the effect of subsidiarity varies with the different natures of European policy arenas, the principle has tended to strengthen the position of the national governments of the Member States. This tendency has been continued in the operation of the Open Method of Coordination and the proposals regarding subsidiarity in the European Convention.

View PDF
Banking Crises and Their Implications on the Financial System (2024)

FAQs

How and why banks suffered financial difficulties during the financial crisis? ›

As a result, when house prices began to fall, banks and investors incurred large losses because they had borrowed so much. Additionally, banks and some investors increasingly borrowed money for very short periods, including overnight, to purchase assets that could not be sold quickly.

What are the effects of banking crisis? ›

These include credit risk (loans and others assets turn bad and ceasing to perform), liquidity risk (withdrawals exceed the available funds), and interest rate risk (rising interest rates reduce the value of bonds held by the bank, and force the bank to pay relatively more on its deposits than it receives on its loans) ...

Which banks are failing in 2024? ›

Republic First Bank reported unrealized securities losses in excess of its equity as early as June 2022. State regulators closed Republic First Bank in April 2024, marking the first bank failure of the year.

What are the causes of the banking crisis? ›

Existing studies have identified several causes of banking crises such as poor risk management, ineffective regulation and supervision, weak corporate governance, high nonperforming loans, low capital adequacy ratio, and monetary policy (see, for example, Christiano et al, 2004; Taylor, 2009; De Grauwe, 2010; Chava and ...

What happens to your money in the bank during a recession? ›

Your money will not be lost. It is usually transferred to another bank with FDIC insurance, or you'll receive a check. Savings accounts, checking accounts, money market accounts, and CDs are examples of federally insured bank accounts.

Are banks to blame for the financial crisis? ›

The Biggest Culprit: The Lenders

Most of the blame is on the mortgage originators or the lenders. That's because they were responsible for creating these problems. After all, the lenders were the ones who advanced loans to people with poor credit and a high risk of default. 7 Here's why that happened.

What happens to the economy when banks collapse? ›

The fallout from a bank collapse can be widespread, hurting the bank's customers, employees, creditors, and even the entire economy. The bank and its shareholders are not the only stakeholders who suffer in a banking crisis. The bank's customers and account holders can be hit hard too.

What might a banking crisis lead to a fall in the money supply? ›

Afraid of humongous withdrawals, financial institutions would be more careful and raise the amount of money held in deposits, thereby raising the reserve ratio. Increases in the currency and reserve deposit ratios reduce the money multiplier and decline in the money supply.

How does banking have an impact on the economy? ›

How Do Banks Drive the Economy? The banking sector is crucial to the modern economy. As the primary supplier of credit, it provides money for people to buy cars and homes and for businesses to buy equipment, expand their operations, and meet their payrolls.

Which is the safest bank? ›

JPMorgan Chase, the financial institution that owns Chase Bank, topped our experts' list because it's designated as the world's most systemically important bank on the 2023 G-SIB list. This designation means it has the highest loss absorbency requirements of any bank, providing more protection against financial crisis.

Can banks seize your money if the economy fails? ›

The short answer is no. Banks cannot take your money without your permission, at least not legally. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insures deposits up to $250,000 per account holder, per bank. If the bank fails, you will return your money to the insured limit.

Why are US banks collapsing? ›

These banks were brought down by customers withdrawing deposits en masse, both because many were tech or crypto businesses that needed money to cover losses, and because there were better savings rates available elsewhere.

Why are all the banks closing? ›

Fresh rounds of closures are being announced every few weeks, with banks justifying the reduction of their networks on the grounds that customers are spurning traditional counter services in favour of banking online and via mobile phones.

How did banks contribute to the financial crisis that began in 2008? ›

Banks and other mortgage originators originated loans, then distributed them by selling them in the secondary loan market; the purchasers of the loans were mortgage securitizers, who paid the originators, or lenders, high fees for mortgages; and the high fees created incentives for lenders to fill the securitization ...

Why were banks so vulnerable to failure during the Great Depression? ›

Many smaller banks, such as this one in Haverhill, Iowa, lacked sufficient reserves to stay in business and became no more than convenient billboards. Many of the small banks had lent large portions of their assets for stock market speculation and were virtually put out of business overnight when the market crashed.

What were the financial effects of the financial crisis in 2008? ›

Altogether, between late 2007 and early 2009, American households lost an estimated $16 trillion in net worth; one quarter of households lost at least 75 percent of their net worth, and more than half lost at least 25 percent.

What causes financial distress in banks? ›

Financial distress is a condition in which a company or individual cannot generate sufficient revenues or income, making it unable to meet or pay its financial obligations. This is generally due to high fixed costs, a large degree of illiquid assets, or revenues sensitive to economic downturns.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Pres. Lawanda Wiegand

Last Updated:

Views: 6138

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Pres. Lawanda Wiegand

Birthday: 1993-01-10

Address: Suite 391 6963 Ullrich Shore, Bellefort, WI 01350-7893

Phone: +6806610432415

Job: Dynamic Manufacturing Assistant

Hobby: amateur radio, Taekwondo, Wood carving, Parkour, Skateboarding, Running, Rafting

Introduction: My name is Pres. Lawanda Wiegand, I am a inquisitive, helpful, glamorous, cheerful, open, clever, innocent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.