financial depth – financial repression linkage
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Financial Repression, Economic Growth and Development
Economic growth and development of market, stock exchange and related variables are among components which influence on business, economic activities and management of society. Financial repression is among economic variables greatly influencing on financial market specifically capital market and economic growth and development; so that, this concept caused to publish financial growth and devel...
full textFinancial repression and optimal taxation
Financial repression entails an implicit taxation on savings. When effective income-tax rates are very uneven, as common in developing countries, raising some government revenue through mild financial repression can be more efficient than collecting income tax only. 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
full textfinancial repression, economic growth and development
economic growth and development of market, stock exchange and related variables are among components which influence on business, economic activities and management of society. financial repression is among economic variables greatly influencing on financial market specifically capital market and economic growth and development; so that, this concept caused to publish financial growth and devel...
full textFinancial Repression in Transition: Evidence from Ukraine
This paper provides a rationale for the relatively poor macroeconomic performance in the post-Soviet transition economies based upon the concept of financial repression. Policies undertaken to assist in financing government expenditures caused financial repression and financial fragmentation, to use the terms introduced by McKinnon (1973). After an introductory section, I introduce a theoretica...
full textEurope between Financial Repression and Regulatory Capture
• The financial crisis modified drastically and rapidly the European financial system’s political economy, with the emergence of two competing narratives. First, government agencies are frequently described as being at the mercy of the financial sector, routinely hijacking political, regulatory and supervisory processes, a trend often referred to as “capture”. But alternatively, governments are...
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Journal title:
iranian economic reviewPublisher: university of tehran
ISSN 1026-6542
volume 17
issue 2 2013
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