01007nam0-2200349li-450 99000013923020331620180312154843.00-19-505012-60013923USA010013923(ALEPH)000013923USA01001392320001109d1989----km-y0itay0103----baengGBApplied geostatisticsEdward H. Isaaks, R. Mohan SrivastavaOxfordUniversity Press1989geologia metodi statistici551.72.Isaaks,Edward H.48587Srivastava. R. MohanSistema bibliotecario di Ateneo dell' Università di SalernoRICA990000139230203316551.72 ISA0007048BKTEC1996061420001110USA01171120020403USA011621PATRY9020040406USA011610Applied geostatistics1501250UNISA04290nam 2200649 450 991046400080332120181115032502.01-4623-6589-21-4519-9233-51-282-84087-897866128408761-4518-6994-0(CKB)3170000000055034(EBL)1605816(SSID)ssj0000943990(PQKBManifestationID)11501261(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000943990(PQKBWorkID)10982912(PQKB)10081310(OCoLC)252904214(MiAaPQ)EBC1605816(EXLCZ)99317000000005503420140226h20082008 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrCentral bank involvement in banking crises in Latin America /Luis Ignacio Jácome ; authorized for distribution by Peter Stella[Washington, District of Columbia] :International Monetary Fund,2008.©20081 online resource (51 p.)IMF Working PapersIMF working paper ;WP/08/135Description based upon print version of record.1-4519-1447-4 Includes bibliographical references.Contents; I. Introduction; II. Taking Stock of Banking Crises in Latin America; A. Defining Banking Crises; B. The Roots of the Crises; Figures; 1. Capital Flows and Banking Crises in Latin America; 2. Financial Reform and Banking Crises in Latin America; 3. Real Effective Exchange Rate and Banking Crises in Latin America; 4. Banking Crises and Real Credit Growth; C. Some Stylized Macroeconomic Facts Accompanying Banking Crises; Tables; 1. Banking Crises in Latin America and Relevant Macro-Financial Features; III. The Role of Central Banks in Banking Crises in Latin AmericaA. Intensive Use of Central Bank Money 2. Modalities of Monetization of Banking Crises; 5. Large Banking Crises in Latin America-Selected Episodes; B. The Role of the Institutional Framework; 6. Minor and Moderate Banking Crises in Latin America-Selected Episodes; 3. Institutional Framework behind Banking Crises in Latin America; Boxes; 1. Large ""Monetization"" of Banking Crises in Selected Countries; 2. Effective Episodes of Bank Restructuring and Resolution in Selected Countries; IV. Macroeconomic Repercussions; A. On Monetary Policy; 3. Banking Crises and Monetary Policy7. Performance of the Money Multiplier in the Midst of Banking Crises in Latin America B. On Macroeconomic Stability; 4. Pair-Wise Correlations Between Selected Variables; 8. Banking Crises and Central Bank Money; 9. Central Bank Money in Banking Crises and Currency Depreciation; 10. Central Bank Money in Banking Crises and Fall in International Reserves; 5. Monetization of Banking Crises, Inflation, and Economic Growth; V. Lessons and Concluding Remarks; Appendix; I. Sample of Episodes of Banking Crises in Latin America from 1990 to 2006-Stylized Facts and Policy Response; ReferencesThis paper reviews the nature of central bank involvement in 26 episodes of financial disturbance and crises in Latin America from the mid-1990s onwards. It finds that, except in a handful of cases, large amounts of central bank money were used to cope with large and small crises alike. Pouring central bank money into the financial system generally derailed monetary policy, fueled further macroeconomic unrest, and contributed to simultaneous currency crises, thereby aggravating financial instability. In contrast, when central bank money issuance was restricted and bank resolution was timely exIMF Working PapersFinancial crisesLatin AmericaMonetary policyLatin AmericaElectronic books.Financial crisesMonetary policy330.9800411Jácome Luis Ignacio905665Stella Peter860306MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910464000803321Central bank involvement in banking crises in Latin America2025800UNINA