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Big data analysis: examination of the relationship between candidates' sociodemographic characteristics and performance in the UK's Membership of the Royal College of Physicians Part 1 examination. [PDF]
Johnston PW+5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices on the National Lung Cancer Screening Program: a qualitative study from Worimi and Awabakal country. [PDF]
Ridgeway Worimi TL+3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Difficult Airway Management in the Intensive Care Unit: A Narrative Review of Algorithms and Strategies. [PDF]
Liaqat T, Amjad MA, Cherian SV.
europepmc +1 more source
Too Big to Fail and Optimal Regulation [PDF]
This paper analyzes the optimal regulation for “Too Big to Fail” (TBTF) in a simple model. As the government cannot credibly commit to no bail-out during crises, banks have an incentive to become excessively large ex-ante.
Chang Ma, Hai Nguyen
semanticscholar +3 more sources
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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.
Nicola Cetorelli, James Traina
semanticscholar +5 more sources
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.
Nicola Cetorelli, James Traina
semanticscholar +5 more sources
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
openaire +5 more sources
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
openaire +1 more source