Australia
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 45, Heft 7-8, S. 1035-1041
ISSN: 1475-6765
53317 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 45, Heft 7-8, S. 1035-1041
ISSN: 1475-6765
Cover -- CONTENTS -- Glossary -- EXECUTIVE SUMMARY -- INTRODUCTION -- A. Financial System Landscape -- B. Scope of the Financial Stability Analysis -- C. Overview of Systemic Risk -- BANK SOLVENCY STRESS TESTS -- A. Key Risks and Vulnerabilities -- B. Scenarios Underpinning the Financial Stability Analysis -- C. Methodology of the Solvency Stress Tests -- D. NPL Projections -- E. Stress Test Results -- F. Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis -- G. Spread Sensitivity Analysis -- H. Concentration Risk -- BANK LIQUIDITY STRESS TESTS -- A. Overview -- B. Methodology -- C. Results -- INTERCONNECTEDNESS AND CONTAGION ANALYSIS -- A. Inter-Sector Financial Linkages -- B. Methodologies -- C. Results -- CORPORATE SECTOR ANALYSIS -- A. Recent Developments -- B. Key Vulnerabilities and Risks -- C. Sensitivity Analysis -- POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS -- References -- FIGURES -- 1. Macroeconomic and Financial Market Conditions -- 2. Banking Sector Detail, 2017 -- 3. Financial Soundness Indicators, 2017 Q4 -- 4. Spillover Risks from the Four Major Australian Banks -- 5. Banks' Consolidated Cross-Border Claims -- 6. Stress Test Scenarios - Baseline and Adverse -- 7. Funding Cost Shocks - Systemic Component -- 8. Funding Composition of Banks - December 2017 -- 9. Final Funding Shocks -- 10. Mortgage NPL Ratios: National vs. Regional Experience -- 12. Stress Test Results - Major Drivers of Change in Capital Levels -- 13. Credit Concentration Risk -- 14. Maturity Structure of Cumulative Cash Flows - Largest Five Banks -- 15. Maturity Structure of Cumulative Cash Flows - Mid-sized Banks -- 16. LCR Baseline Regulatory Parameters -- 17. LCR Scenario Analysis -- 18. LCR Scenario Analysis - Major vs. Mid-sized Banks -- 19. Cash Inflows and Outflows - System Average -- 20. Domestic Interconnectedness - National Accounts -- 21. International Interconnectedness.
Cover -- CONTENTS -- Glossary -- EXECUTIVE SUMMARY -- BACKGROUND AND VULNERABILITIES -- A. Macrofinancial Setting -- B. Key Risks -- C. Banking Environment -- D. Nonbank Financial Intermediaries -- E. Household Sector -- F. Corporate Sector -- G. Recent Developments -- FINANCIAL SECTOR RESILIENCE -- A. Credit Risks -- B. Liquidity Risks -- C. Contagion Risks -- FINANCIAL STABILITY POLICY -- A. Oversight Framework -- B. Macroprudential Policy and Tools -- C. Banking Supervision -- D. Insurance Supervision -- E. Financial Market Infrastructures -- F. AML / CFT -- CRISIS MANAGEMENT AND FINANCIAL SAFETY NETS -- FIGURES -- 1. Macrofinancial Cycle and Vulnerability -- 2. Financial System Structure -- 3. Banks' Consolidated Cross-Border Claims -- 4. Nonbank Credit -- 5. Corporate Sector Debt-At-Risk -- 6. Solvency Stress Test Results - Major Drivers of Change in Capital Levels -- 7. Banks Under Liquidity Risk Scenarios -- 8. Maturity Structure of Banks' Cumulative Cashflows -- 9. Australian Banks' Linkages with G-SIBs -- 10. Cross-border Linkages and Vulnerabilities -- 11. Landscape of Financial Market Infrastructures -- 12. Indicators of Macroeconomic and Financial Market Conditions -- 13. Financial Soundness Indicators, 2017 Q4 -- 14. Comparison of Financial Soundness Indicators, 2017 Q4. -- 15. Banking Sector Detail, 2017 -- 16. Real Estate Market Developments -- 17. Household Sector -- 18. Nonfinancial Corporate Sector -- TABLES -- 1. FSAP Key Recommendations -- 2. Solvency Stress Test Results -- 3. Risk Assessment Matrix -- 4. Selected Economic Indicators, 2014-24 -- 5. Structure of the Financial System, 2017 -- 6. Financial Soundness Indicators for the Banking Sector -- 7.Status of Key Recommendations of the 2012 FSAP -- APPENDICES -- I. Banking Sector Stress Testing Matrix (STeM) -- II. Key Macroprudential Policy Measures, 2014-18.
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 48, Heft 7-8, S. 874-883
ISSN: 1475-6765
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 49, Heft 7-8, S. 868-879
ISSN: 1475-6765
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 622, S. 320-327
ISSN: 1552-3349
Opt-out class actions exist in the Federal Court and in Victoria, but not other states, supported by liberal funding and cost regimes. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Inc., copyright The American Academy of Political and Social Science.]
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 46, Heft 7-8, S. 867-875
ISSN: 1475-6765
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 47, Heft 7-8, S. 892-901
ISSN: 1475-6765
In: In M Williams (ed), The Political Economy of Competition Law in Asia, (Edward Elgar, UK, 2013)
SSRN
In: Contemporary Tourism Reviews
In: Contemporary Tourism Reviews Ser.
Part of the Contemporary Review Series. Contemporary Tourism Reviews will provide you with critical, state-of-the-art surveys of all of the major areas of tourism study to people who are coming to a topic for the first time. Written by leading thinkers and academics in the field they provide flexible, current and topical information as an instant download
In: Brooke Dellavedova, Brendan Sweeney and Vince Morabito, 'Australia' in Albert A. Foer and Jonathan W. Cuneo (eds), The International Handbook on Private Enforcement of Competition Law (2012)
SSRN
In: Protest for a Future II: Composition, Mobilization and Motives of the Participants in Fridays For Future Climate Protests on 20-27 September, 2019, in 19 Cities Around the World pp: 35-51
The contemporary mass mobilisation of school students in Australia is unprecedented but also reflects the growing numbers of young people participating in the past 15 years in Australian youth-led organisations for climate and social justice (Collin, 2015). Among these, the youth-led Australian Youth Climate Coalition (AYCC) has been particularly significant: running high profile participatory campaigns, delivering climate campaigning workshops, training for school-age students and developing an extensive and decentralised model of community organising and action. With more than 150,000 members, the AYCC enables personalisable collective action: AYCC followers choose their own level of engagement and organise localised and networked actions, online and offline - hallmarks of the current climate protests.
BASE
In: 'Australia' in Luis Roberto Barroso and Richard Albert (eds), The International Review of Constitutional Reform (Program on Constitutional Studies at the University of Texas at Austin and the International Forum on the Future of Constitutionalism, 2021) 16-20
SSRN
In: Environmental and Planning Law Journal, Band 32, S. 437
SSRN