Listing 1 - 10 of 10 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Credit scoring systems --- Credit ratings --- Consumer credit
Choose an application
Credit scoring systems --- Credit ratings --- Consumer credit
Choose an application
Choose an application
Dieses Buch ist ein wichtiger Diskussionsbeitrag, der Wissenschaft und Praxis fundiertes Material an die Hand gibt, um sich eingehend mit Sozialkreditsystemen zu befassen. Es liegt in der Natur einer ergebnisoffenen Disputation, dass dabei widersprechende Meinungen zu Wort kommen. Social Credit Ratings sind das Ergebnis von Sozialkreditsystemen. Diese umfassen auf verschiedene Datenbanken zugreifende Ratingsysteme, bei denen beispielsweise die Kreditwürdigkeit, das Strafregister und das soziale Verhalten von Personen oder Organisationen zur Klassifizierung ihrer Reputation verwendet werden. Das Fahreignungs-Bewertungssystem des Kraftfahrt-Bundesamtes ist ebenso anerkannt wie die SCHUFA-BonitätsAuskunft oder Noten von Ratingagenturen. Ähnliche Systeme wie Hotelsterne, Bewertungen in Online-Shops oder Likes sind in Social Media verbreitet. Der vom chinesischen Staatsrat beschlossene Aufbau eines staatseigenen Sozialkreditsystems führt solche Ratings aufgrund einzigartiger Verknüpfungen in eine neue Dimension, die durch die neuen Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien ermöglicht wurde. Dieses Buch gibt einen tiefen Einblick in die verwendeten Daten, Methoden und Modelle. Es diskutiert Bedeutung, Nutzen, Funktionen, Anwendungsbereiche sowie Risiken und Gefahren von Social Credit Ratings. Der Inhalt • Chinas Social Credit Rating • Social Credit Rating Governance • Persönlichkeits- und Wettbewerbsrecht • Ethik im Social Credit Rating • Nachhaltigkeit im Rating • Methoden und Modelle zum Social Credit Rating • Funktionen und Anwendungsbeispiele • Ausblick Der Herausgeber Dr. Oliver Everling ist Geschäftsführer der RATING EVIDENCE GmbH in Frankfurt am Main.
Public relations. --- Corporate Communication/Public Relations. --- Credit ratings. --- Massachusetts trusts.
Choose an application
Climate change is an existential threat to the world economy like no other, with complex, evolving and nonlinear dynamics that remain a source of great uncertainty. There is a bourgeoning literature on the economic impact of climate change, but research on how climate change affects sovereign risks is limited. Building on our previous research focusing on the impact of climate change on sovereign risks, this paper empirically investigates how climate change may affect sovereign credit ratings. By means of binary-choice models, we find that climate change vulnerability has adverse effects on sovereign credit ratings, after controlling for conventional macroeconomic determinants of credit worthiness. On the other hand, with regards to climate change resilience, we find that countries with greater climate change resilience benefit from higher (better) credit ratings. These findings, robust to a battery of sensitivity checks, also show that impact of climate change is disproportionately greater in developing countries due largely to weaker capacity to adapt to and mitigate the consequences of climate change.
Business and Economics --- Banks and Banking --- Finance: General --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Environmental Economics --- 'Panel Data Models --- Spatio-temporal Models' --- Discrete Regression and Qualitative Choice Models --- Discrete Regressors --- Proportions --- Investment Banking --- Venture Capital --- Brokerage --- Ratings and Ratings Agencies --- Climate --- Natural Disasters and Their Management --- Global Warming --- Environment and Development --- Environment and Trade --- Sustainability --- Environmental Accounts and Accounting --- Environmental Equity --- Population Growth --- Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General --- Monetary Policy --- General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data) --- Climate change --- Monetary economics --- Banking --- Finance --- Credit ratings --- International reserves --- Credit --- Emerging and frontier financial markets --- Climatic changes --- Foreign exchange reserves --- Financial services industry --- Australia
Choose an application
"The Chinese economy is now easily one of the most important and closely scrutinized economies in the world. Relatively minuscule changes in predictions of how the Chinese economy will perform can drive up or down stocks and the price of oil and other commodities. At the heart of how the Chinese economy works is its financial system-but the Chinese financial system is vastly different than most people in the West can understand. How do house prices work, for example, in a country where the very concept of property ownership is significantly different than our own? This edited volume will serve as a standard reference guide to China's financial system. With eighteen chapters, the handbook features overviews on the banking sector-the core of China's financial system and the key channel for implementing China's monetary policy-China's ongoing reforms, and the quickly growing bond and money markets, among other topics. Each chapter is written by a leading expert in the field, and as a whole the list of contributors represents an impressive mix of leading scholars and high-level policy officials, some with first-hand knowledge of setting and carrying out Chinese financial policy. The handbook will serve as the first real authoritative volume of literature in the field, and will shed extensive new light on the links between China's financial system and the real economy"--
Finance --- China --- Economic policy --- A-shares. --- British pound. --- C schemes. --- Chinese investment funds. --- Chinese mutual funds. --- Chinese rating agency. --- Euro. --- FDI. --- Fintech cities. --- IFRS. --- IMF. --- IPO reform. --- Japanese yen. --- LGFV. --- McCallum rule. --- PBC policy rates. --- Q schemes. --- QFII. --- RMB cross-border flows. --- RMB internationalization. --- RMB lending. --- RQFII, QDII. --- SOEs. --- Shanghai stock exchange. --- Shenzhen stock exchange. --- Taylor rule. --- US dollar. --- VC. --- accounting system. --- asset management. --- banking institutions. --- banking regulations. --- banking. --- basic social security. --- benchmark rates. --- bond connect. --- bond credit ratings. --- bond markets. --- capital account liberalization. --- central bank independence. --- corporate governance. --- credit extension. --- credit market rates. --- domestic assets. --- employer-sponsored annuity programs. --- equity markets. --- familiarity. --- fintech development. --- fintech regulatory developments. --- fintech. --- foreign direct investment. --- foreign exchange. --- hedge funds. --- infrastructure financing. --- interbank markets. --- interest rate liberalization. --- interest rates. --- internet usage. --- investor behavior. --- investor behavioral biases. --- limited attention. --- liquidity facility rates. --- local government financing vehicles. --- loss aversion. --- macroprudential policies. --- market economy. --- microprudential supervision initiatives. --- monetary policy instruments. --- monetary policy. --- money markets. --- mutual fund industry. --- mutual funds. --- online shopping. --- overconfidence. --- pension system. --- pensions. --- price-based policy instruments. --- private equity funds. --- public pension scheme. --- quantity-based policy instruments. --- real state market. --- representativeness bias. --- shadow banking. --- shareholder activism. --- state-owned commercial banks. --- stock connect. --- stock market regulations. --- stock market. --- venture capital funds. --- venture capital market.
Listing 1 - 10 of 10 |
Sort by
|