1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910813578403321

Titolo

Finance & Development, June 2012

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2012

ISBN

1-4639-9673-X

1-4639-9279-3

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (60 p.)

Collana

Finance & Development

Disciplina

332.10973

Soggetti

Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009

International finance

Finance: General

Labor

Macroeconomics

Criminology

Public Finance

General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data)

Illegal Behavior and the Enforcement of Law

Informal Economy

Underground Econom

Financial Crises

Environment and Growth

Labour

income economics

Finance

Economic growth

Economics of specific sectors

Economic & financial crises & disasters

Informal economy

Sustainable growth

Employment

Financial crises

Emerging and frontier financial markets

Economic sectors

Financial markets

Informal sector

Economics

Money laundering

Economic development



Financial services industry

Prices

Income economics

United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Two columns to the page.

"The crisis and beyond"--Cover.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Contents; DEPARTMENTS; Letters to the Editor; People in Economics; Minder of the Gaps; Boxes; Box 1 Economics: Changing the paradigm; Box 2 Slow progress for women; FEATURES; FIVE YEARS ON; The Crisis and Beyond; Tracking the Global Recovery; Charts; Chart 1 On track; Chart 2 Two-speed rebound; Chart 3 Trade returns; Chart 4 In search of jobs; Chart 5 Joined at the hip; Chart 6 Oil threatens recovery; Fixing the System; Trade Policy: So Far So Good?; Chart 1 Bounce back; Chart 2 Lower levies; Shedding Debt; Chart 1 Piling on debt; Chart 2 Consumers gorge; Chart 3 Corporate restraint

Bystanders at the Collapse Chart 1 Hit hard; Chart 2 In recovery; Stable Disequilibrium; Commodities in Boom; Chart 1 A wild ride; Chart 2 Fast comeback; Picture This; Water for People; ALSO IN THIS ISSUE; Going Green; Chart 1 Greening up; Chart 2 Renewables rising; Dirty Money, Real Pain; Out of the Shadows; Back to Basics; What Are Money Markets?; More Jobs, Better Jobs; Chart 1 Less poverty; Chart 2 Same old story; Chart 3 Limiting factors; Chart 4 Nourish children; Straight Talk; Age of Austerity; Book Reviews; Data Spotlight; G7 Borrowing from Abroad

Sommario/riassunto

Five years after the first stirrings of the crisis, some countries have recovered, but others are still struggling. F&D looks at the world today and sees a complex and mixed picture for the future of the world economy. In "Tracking the Global Recovery" we learn that most emerging markets seem to have moved on from the effects of the crisis, but most advanced economies have not. "Fixing the System" looks at how the pace of reforms to strengthen financial regulation has now slowed. World Bank trade economist Bernard Hoekman takes stock of incipient moves toward protectionism in "Trade Policy: So Far So Good?". "Bystanders at the Collapse" looks at how emerging markets and low-income countries weathered the global recession. Financier Mohamed El-Erian weighs in on the potential threat posed by large payment surpluses and deficits in "Stable Disequilibrium." Also in the magazine, we explore what's happening in commodities markets, assess the rise of green technologies, take a look at the shifts in South Asia's labor force, and uncover the harm money laundering can inflict on national economies. F&D's People in Economics series profiles Laura Tyson, Minder of the Gaps, and the Back to Basics series explains how money markets provide a way for borrowers to meet short-term financial needs.