Results 281 to 290 of about 922,338 (333)
Outsourcing Policy-Related Functions in Australia: Health and Equity Impacts. [PDF]
Anaf J, Freeman T, Baum F.
europepmc +1 more source
Too Big to Fail Perception by Depositors: an empirical investigation [PDF]
Lucas A. B. de C. Barros+2 more
core
Unsupervised Optical Mark Recognition on Answer Sheets for Massive Printed Multiple-Choice Tests. [PDF]
Hernández-Mier Y+4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Handling Risky Situations, Especially the Unexpected, With Elite Performance. [PDF]
Waters P+4 more
europepmc +1 more source
This essay, written for a festschrift volume dedicated to the work of Marilyn Strathern, considers how Strathern's work on relationality, personhood and form illuminates current debates about state-market relations after the financial crisis. Focusing on corporate personhood, in the aftermath of the American occupation of Japan on the one hand, and the
Möschel, Wernhard
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Too big to fail after FDICIA [PDF]
In 1993, when this article was originally published, Congress had recently passed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 (FDICIA) to reduce taxpayers' exposure to financial system losses, including their exposure at too big to fail financial institutions.
Larry D. Wall
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The Basics of Too Big to Fail [PDF]
This essay lays out the basics of the “too-big-to-fail” (TBTF) phenomenon: What it means; why it is a problem; the central role that TBTF financial institutions played in the financial crisis of 2008; and why better prudential regulation than was present
White, Lawrence J.
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Architectural Design, 2012
AbstractSarah Dunn and Martin Felsen of UrbanLab tackle the timidity of current practice: ‘Why, as a discipline, do we think that we can counter big crises with small ideas?’ They call for a contemporary revival and redefinition of the megastructure.
Sarah Dunn, Martin Felsen
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AbstractSarah Dunn and Martin Felsen of UrbanLab tackle the timidity of current practice: ‘Why, as a discipline, do we think that we can counter big crises with small ideas?’ They call for a contemporary revival and redefinition of the megastructure.
Sarah Dunn, Martin Felsen
openaire +5 more sources
Too big to succeed or too big to fail? [PDF]
It is often argued that smaller/younger firms are more innovative than older/larger firms—the latter may be “too big to succeed.” We show in the context of a simple industry model with consumer search frictions why evidence suggesting that smaller or younger firms are more successful at innovation may be subject to sample selection bias.
Amnon Schreiber+2 more
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SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
Using a synthetic control research design, we find that living will regulation increases a bank’s annual cost of capital by 22 bps, or 10% of total funding costs. This effect is stronger in banks measured as systemically important before the regulation’s announcement. We interpret our findings as a reduction in Too-Big-to-Fail subsidies.
Cetorelli, Nicola, Traina, James
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Using a synthetic control research design, we find that living will regulation increases a bank’s annual cost of capital by 22 bps, or 10% of total funding costs. This effect is stronger in banks measured as systemically important before the regulation’s announcement. We interpret our findings as a reduction in Too-Big-to-Fail subsidies.
Cetorelli, Nicola, Traina, James
openaire +4 more sources