scholarly journals Three Decades of International Financial Crises: What Have We Learned and What Still Needs to be Done?

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ross P. Buckley ◽  
Emilios Avgouleas ◽  
Douglas W. Arner
Author(s):  
Joe Kelley

We propose to use FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Arrays) to solve the nearly insurmountable computational challenges of Financial Network Models. Flow of funds models have been discussed for decades, but recently, the research activity has picked up due to international financial crises and the increased power of computers, mathematics, and economic models to address these crises. We survey many of these developments and discuss how FPGA can provide the critical technology to provide answers fast enough to be useable by managers in banks and regulatory agencies.


1999 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juergen B. Dönges

AbstractRecent international financial crises in emerging markets have impressively made clear that there is still a lack of knowledge about the causes and consequences of financial turmoil. In particular, questions of why crises emerge, how they are transmitted, how they can be predicted and prevented and how they can be managed once they have occurred, are not adequately answered. Both research in economics and economic policy now focus on all aspects of international financial crises. This paper first provides an overview about the state of economic theory explaining financial and monetary crises. The theoretical survey is followed by a discussion of the appropriate economic policy reaction. This discussion includes the role of international organisations, exchange rate policy, costs and benefits of capital controls as well as the need for a prudential banking regulation.


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