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Lessons of Survival in Managing Economic and Banking Crises

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dc.contributor.author Abdul Raoof Butt
dc.contributor.author Mehmood-ul-Hassan
dc.contributor.author Abdul Raoof
dc.date.accessioned 2014-07-11T09:24:17Z
dc.date.available 2014-07-11T09:24:17Z
dc.date.issued 1999-12
dc.identifier.citation The Lahore Journal of Economics Volume 4, No.2 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1811-5438
dc.identifier.uri http://www.lahoreschoolofeconomics.edu.pk/
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/4968
dc.description PP.33; ill en_US
dc.description.abstract Pakistan is enduring a serious economic downturn and facing the probability of the collapse of the banking and financial systems. The growth outlook is meek and risk of default is hanging over the head of the nation as a sword. Banking and financial institutions and economic systems of Pakistan like that of ASEAN and other crises hit countries, suffer from bad loans, political interference, corruption, declining exports, budget and trade deficits, internal and external debts, crashes of stock exchanges, currency mismanagement, and double digit inflation. While 'survival of the fittest’ is ever a self-evident truth, the lessons of the rise and fall of nations are important for survival. In order to meet the challenge of survival, it may be crucial to learn the underlying causes that accounted for and understand the strategies and reforms that attempted to manage the economies of the countries suffering from the crises. The banking and financial sectors play significant roles in the contemporary world of business and economic growth. They influence economic activities in the field of production and facilitate the distribution of financial resources in diverse and integrated ways. The experiences of developed countries such as the United States of America, Germany and U.K. clearly demonstrate that organised economic structures and sound banking and financial systems not only boost their macro and micro economies but also may save them from any sudden banking and financial crisis. Economic and banking crises vividly illustrate the consequences of weak financial systems and inadequate macroeconomic policies. Many countries of the world faced crises in their economic and banking systems that tended to worsen the structure of their entire economies. Rapid trade, globalisation, financial integration of world economies and technological developments are considered as catalysts for the ‘East Asian Crisis’ that hit many Southern Asian countries especially and the rest of the world generally.Economic and banking problems require major and expensive reforms in the banking systems. Often, the problems have domestic causes, such as weak banking supervision, superfluous political interference, inadequate capital, and bad loans. Weakness of banking systems is considered as the main cause of the East Asian, Mexican, and Swedish crises. The countries adopted diverse strategies in order to survive in the crises with different levels of successes. Their experiences of banking and financial reforms may be useful to the rest of the world in order to minimise the risks of any probable crisis. This study investigates economic and banking crises in East Asian countries, Mexico and Sweden and deduces the lessons of survival. Economics, culture, environment, production systems, and financial institutions are connected with one another in a circular cause and effect relationship. The study indicates that the survival in part is in producing environmentally safe quality products, creating sound alliances with international communities and institutions, promoting sustainable growth patterns, and following balanced trade pursuits. Survival is in the vitality of our culture and in the potency of our ideals. It is very important to improve the standards of supervision, regulation, and transparency of financial systems. In this connection, a central bank may be given a free hand through more autonomy. Consolidation of the credit markets, liberalisation of interest rates, application of prudential regulations, and sensible administration of privatisation policies may be useful in order to avoid a banking and financial crisis in Pakistan. The beneficiaries of this study may include banking experts, policy makers, financial analysts, and associated students and teachers. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher © Lahore School of Economics en_US
dc.subject Managing Economic en_US
dc.subject Banking Crises en_US
dc.subject Banking & Finance en_US
dc.subject BANKING en_US
dc.title Lessons of Survival in Managing Economic and Banking Crises en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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