Results 181 to 190 of about 34,535 (239)
Why Skill Upgradation is the Need of the Hour in Indian Banking Sector
M. Chandrashekar, Harish Kumar
openalex +1 more source
Human Capital and Its Impact on the Career Success:Serbian and Macedonian Banking Sector [PDF]
Radjenovic, Zarko, Tatjana Boskov
openalex
Reforms, incentives and banking sector productivity: a case of Nepal
Kul B. Luintel +2 more
openalex +1 more source
TRENDS AND IMPLICATIONS OF PROBLEMATIC ASSETS IN CENTRAL COOPERATIVE BANKING SECTOR
P. Selvi Rajendran +1 more
openalex +2 more sources
THE FINANCIAL CONTEXT OF CORPORATE GREEN INVESTMENTS IN THE POLISH BANKING SECTOR Ire
Irena Pyka, Jan Pyka
openalex +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Portuguese banking sector: a mixed oligopoly?
International Journal of Industrial Organization, 1999In this paper we investigate whether we can find evidence of a regulatory intervention in the Portuguese banking sector. We develop and estimate using panel data a simple oligopoly model where one public bank competes in prices with several private banks.
Barros, Fátima, Modesto, Leonor
openaire +1 more source
2022
China registered double-digit GDP growth for more than three decades. Recently, the rate has slowed down considerably. The slow growth period, which Chinese policymakers refer to as the 'new-normal', has created enormous curiosity among scholars and policymakers. In particular, scholars often tend to project if China is destined to follow Japan's fate.
M. Kabir Hassan, Mohammad Dulal Miah
openaire +1 more source
China registered double-digit GDP growth for more than three decades. Recently, the rate has slowed down considerably. The slow growth period, which Chinese policymakers refer to as the 'new-normal', has created enormous curiosity among scholars and policymakers. In particular, scholars often tend to project if China is destined to follow Japan's fate.
M. Kabir Hassan, Mohammad Dulal Miah
openaire +1 more source
FDI in the Banking Sector [PDF]
When countries open their financial sectors, foreign-owned banks appear to bring superior efficiency to their host markets but also charge higher markups on borrowed funds than their domestically owned rivals, with unknown impacts on interest rates and welfare.
Beatriz de Blas, Katheryn Russ
openaire +2 more sources

