The impact of the financial crisis on happiness in affluent European countries

2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 183-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bent Greve
Kybernetes ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Teresa Sorrosal-Forradellas ◽  
Lisana B. Martinez ◽  
Antonio Terceño

Purpose The last great financial crisis which arose in the middle of 2007 in the USA produced contagion effects over others economies. The purpose of this paper is focused on analyzing the evolution of a set of economic variables of 17 European countries since 1991 until 2013. Sovereign bond spreads are also considered to compare the incidence of the financial crisis over the economies considering macroeconomics fundamentals and fixed bonds. Design/methodology/approach Self-organizing maps (SOMs) are used to achieve the purpose of the research. With this methodology, it is possible to analyze the evolution of the macroeconomic fundamentals of each country, obtaining particular and general conclusions according to the position of each country in the SOM. Moreover, the countries are compared between them and with its respective sovereign bond spreads level for each year of analysis. Findings The impact of the crisis is different between the countries was analyzed. Belonging to the European Monetary Union is an interesting characteristic of some of the most affect economies. Research limitations/implications This research presents wide implications for the economies to control the most vulnerable economic variables in front of financial crisis to prevent the contagion effect. The inclusion of more economic variables and countries could enhance the study. Originality/value This research analyzes the relationship between macroeconomic variables and sovereign bond spreads using an infrequent methodology. The results obtained are valuable because they highlight how the present crisis has differently affected the European countries.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 1569-1573
Author(s):  
Wioletta Świeboda

The purpose of this paper is to present the main data about general government debt. It is a challenge to analyze selected group of countries because they are very heterogeneous. For instance Belgium is a well-developed “old-EU” country while Spain is one of the southern European countries with specific issues like unemployment and a huge national debt. Poland, on the contrary, had a centrally planned economy, went through the transition to market economy and only subsequently became an EU member. The key point of this research is to explain how they evolved in the years after the crisis. This paper includes an analysis of the evolution of the public budget of each government.It was fundamental to implement urgent measures and policies, in order to recover the economy of these countries and return to sustainable growth after the 2008 Financial Crisis. A brief overview of these countries’ pensions systems is included, as it has a major share in their government spending and fiscal stability. It is one of the most concerning fiscal issues nowadays that is constantly being in question and probably modified in the short-term.As of 2008, the first symptoms of the international financial crisis began to manifestthemselves in the European countries. As a consequence, European countries like Spain orBelgium suffered a drop in their economic activity and an increase of the unemploymentrate. In the case of Poland, the impact of the crisis was not as dramatic as in other countries,however they also needed to react to the financial deficit.Between the period of 2010 and 2017, the countries needed to make several reformsespecially concerning the national Value Added Tax, and restructuring the provision ofcertain public services such as health funding, infrastructure, education and employment. General government debt-to-GDP ratio is the amount of a country's total gross government debt as a percentage of its GDP. It is an indicator of an economy's health and a key factor for the sustainability of government finance. "Debt" is commonly defined as a specific subset of liabilities identified according to the types of financial instruments included or excluded. The evolution of public debt and the government surplus/deficit among the years, helps to picture how was the country economy situation before the Financial Crisis and therefore helps to understand why the consequences are in some cases more extreme and dramatic than other.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (25) ◽  
pp. 6440-6445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johan P. Mackenbach ◽  
José Rubio Valverde ◽  
Barbara Artnik ◽  
Matthias Bopp ◽  
Henrik Brønnum-Hansen ◽  
...  

Unfavorable health trends among the lowly educated have recently been reported from the United States. We analyzed health trends by education in European countries, paying particular attention to the possibility of recent trend interruptions, including interruptions related to the impact of the 2008 financial crisis. We collected and harmonized data on mortality from ca. 1980 to ca. 2014 for 17 countries covering 9.8 million deaths and data on self-reported morbidity from ca. 2002 to ca. 2014 for 27 countries covering 350,000 survey respondents. We used interrupted time-series analyses to study changes over time and country-fixed effects analyses to study the impact of crisis-related economic conditions on health outcomes. Recent trends were more favorable than in previous decades, particularly in Eastern Europe, where mortality started to decline among lowly educated men and where the decline in less-than-good self-assessed health accelerated, resulting in some narrowing of health inequalities. In Western Europe, mortality has continued to decline among the lowly and highly educated, and although the decline of less-than-good self-assessed health slowed in countries severely hit by the financial crisis, this affected lowly and highly educated equally. Crisis-related economic conditions were not associated with widening health inequalities. Our results show that the unfavorable trends observed in the United States are not found in Europe. There has also been no discernible short-term impact of the crisis on health inequalities at the population level. Both findings suggest that European countries have been successful in avoiding an aggravation of health inequalities.


2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ola Bergström

This article draws on longitudinal data to analyse restructuring in 11 EU member states in response to the 2008–2009 financial crisis. It finds that despite the dramatic crisis, restructuring regimes remained rather stable. New policies were adopted and existing policies were reformed, but changes were primarily within the existing regimes, though collectively agreed measures are important. However, in three countries, changes were more radical, indicating a shift in the dominant adjustment and governance mechanisms. These findings have implications for the understanding of how restructuring regimes change and how such changes may be studied, implying that restructuring policies cannot be evaluated in isolation. Any attempt to analyse the impact of restructuring policies on labour market outcomes must take account of the interplay of different policies and how their emphasis and character change over time.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (06) ◽  
pp. 1950041 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nguyet Thi Minh Nguyen ◽  
Chau Minh Duong

This paper finds that the financial crisis has tremendously impacted innovation in most European countries with Greece and Lithuania being the most affected while Finland and Austria have the least negative effect on their innovation activities. Greece and Lithuania’s national innovation systems share many common characteristics which are in sharp contrast to those shared by Finland and Austria, including most notably culture, quality of the higher education system, science and technological capability, and structure of the economy. Those identified distinctions along the main dimensions of the national innovation systems between the most and least affected countries could to a large extent explain why the effect of the financial crisis is heterogeneous across European countries.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Filipe Sardo ◽  
Zelia Serrasqueiro

The current study seeks to analyse the impact of the intellectual capital (IC) on the financial performance measured by Return on Assets in the European context for the period 2004-2015. This study uses data of non-financial listed firms of 8 European countries for the period between 2004 and 2015. Considering that financial crisis had different impact on European countries, we divided the eight countries in two groups: (1) group 1 – Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy; and (2) group 2 – Germany, France, Finland and United Kingdom (UK). The estimation method used is the GMM system (1998) estimator, as a dynamic panel estimator, which allows to do longitudinal studies and to analyse the effect of lagged explanatory variables on firms’ financial performance. The results indicate that IC efficiency in the current period has a positive impact on financial performance. The three components of VAICTM Model - capital employed efficiency, human capital efficiency and structural capital efficiency in the current period have a positive impact on financial performance, with the exception for structural capital efficiency which for the first group of countries has a negative impact on financial performance. Finally, results suggest that the financial crisis negatively affects financial performance on both groups of countries. The current study contributes to the current literature, analysing the impact of IC on firms’ financial performance in two groups of European countries which suffered the consequences of the 2008 crisis differently.


2015 ◽  
pp. 89-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thuy Nguyen Thu ◽  
Giang Dao Thi Thu ◽  
Hoang Truong Huy

This paper examines the abnormal returns in merger withdrawals in Australia, especially distinguishing the market response between private and public targets. We also study the determinants of those abnormal returns, including the method of payment and the impact of financial crisis periods. Using the event study method, we document that in the Australian context, the announced withdrawal of mergers involving private targets creates significantly negative valuation effects in comparison with the valuation effects in withdrawal of mergers involving public targets. We also find that a financial crisis period strongly affects abnormal returns of merger withdrawals. However, the method of payment does not have any impact on the abnormal returns.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document