South East Europe Regular Economic Report, November 2011

Autor: World Bank
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2011
Předmět:
DEBT PAPER
FOREIGN PORTFOLIO INVESTMENT
CURRENCY BOARD
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVES
DEPOSIT
INFLATION
LIQUIDATION
FISCAL DEFICIT
EMPLOYMENT
INCOME
EXPORT GROWTH
GOVERNMENT BORROWING
FISCAL BURDEN
PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
PENSION
BONDS
FINANCIAL MARKET
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
CAPITAL ADEQUACY RATIOS
DOMESTIC BANK
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOVEREIGN DEBT MARKET
BANKRUPTCY PROCEDURE
REORGANIZATION
TRANSPARENCY
EMERGING MARKETS
PENSIONS
DEBT LEVELS
EMERGING ECONOMIES
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
CREDIT DEFAULT SWAP
SOVEREIGN DEBT
CREDITORS
NOTARY
BANK DEPOSITS
GLOBAL ECONOMY
RETIREMENT
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL STATISTICS
MARKET EFFICIENCY
CADASTRE
BALANCE SHEET
MONETARY POLICY
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
FOREIGN BANKS
LIQUIDITY
CREDIT EXPANSION
INTEREST RATES
REFORM PROGRAM
BANK OF GREECE
PUBLIC DEBT
INCOME LEVELS
SELF-REGULATION
INTEREST EXPENDITURES
PENSION REFORM
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
ENTERPRISE PERFORMANCE
FOREIGN PORTFOLIO
TAX RATE
VOLATILE ENVIRONMENT
PRIVATE FINANCING
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
STOCK MARKET VOLATILITY
HOST COUNTRIES
DEBT SERVICING COSTS
PORTFOLIO FLOWS
SOVEREIGN DEBT PROBLEMS
RETURNS ON EQUITY
TRADE BALANCE
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
PORTFOLIO
BANKRUPTCY
OPEN ECONOMIES
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
POLITICAL ECONOMY
LENDERS
TAXATION
CONSOLIDATION
GOVERNMENT REVENUES
INCOME TAX
DOMESTIC BORROWING
OVERSIGHT PROCESSES
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
RISK PREMIUM
FOREIGN CURRENCY DEPOSITS
FISCAL POLICY
EQUIPMENT
CURRENCY
SINGLE MARKET
LOAN PROCEEDS
PRIVATE CREDIT
EQUITY INDEX
PRIVATIZATION
LOAN
COMMODITY PRICES
PUBLIC FINANCE
BANK CREDIT
MATURITY
CREDIT RATING
EXPOSURE
ISSUANCE
REAL ESTATE
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
SUBSIDIARY
SUPERVISORY AUTHORITIES
INVESTOR INTEREST
LAWS
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
MARKET ACCESS
ADVERSE EFFECT
TAX COMPLIANCE
TAX
BANKING SYSTEM
DEMOGRAPHIC
STOCK MARKET
EXCHANGE RATES
GOVERNMENT DEBT
COMMODITY
EXTERNAL FINANCING
INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
BANK LENDING
PRODUCTIVITY
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC CAPITAL
FIXED EXCHANGE RATES
ECONOMIC CRISIS
RULE OF LAW
FINANCIAL CRISIS
TRADE RELATIONS
FOREIGN FINANCING
BOOST TO GROWTH
RAPID GROWTH
SETTLEMENT
BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS
EXPORT MARKET
FINANCIAL MARKET DEVELOPMENT
LOAN LOSS PROVISIONS
WAGES
EXTERNAL DEBT
INDIVIDUAL FIRMS
LABOR MARKET
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
EXTERNAL DEFICITS
MACROECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT
CREDIT LINE
BANKING SECTOR
DIVIDEND
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT
CENTRAL BANK
RETURN
NATIONAL BANK
DIVIDENDS
FINANCING SOURCES
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
CDS
MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
MINISTRIES OF FINANCE
REGIONAL TRADE
CREDIT INFORMATION SYSTEM
ACCOUNTING
FINANCES
CREDIT DEFAULT
COMMERCIAL BORROWING
MARKET DEVELOPMENT
REMITTANCES
CREDIT INFORMATION
LEVEL OF DEBT
FUTURE GROWTH
PRIVATE CREDIT BUREAU
OUTPUT
OIL PRICES
FINANCIAL STABILITY
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
INSURANCE
MARKET PERFORMANCE
EUROBOND
MARKET CONDITIONS
PENSION SYSTEMS
MIGRATION
SOCIAL PROTECTION
GROWTH RATE
LEGISLATION
GLOBAL BOND
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES
DEBT SERVICING
MONETARY FUND
REAL GROWTH RATES
FISCAL POLICIES
ENFORCEMENT SYSTEM
REGULATORS
CONFIDENCE INDICES
TRACK RECORD
FISCAL CONSOLIDATION
DOMESTIC CAPITAL MARKETS
REAL SECTOR
CAPITAL INFLOWS
TAX ADMINISTRATION
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
FOREIGN CURRENCY
BANKRUPTCY LAW
EXPENDITURE
Popis: The recovery of global growth that started in 2010 began to weaken in 2011. During the first half the falloff was linked to the Tohoku nuclear disaster in Japan and high oil prices, but by the end of July, temporary effects from Tohoku were starting to fade and global industrial production was rising. However, since August the global economy has come under increasing stress from the sovereign debt problems in Europe, anemic growth in the US, and a slowdown in China and other main emerging markets. The latest leading indicators and forecasts point to a further slowdown in growth in Europe. Meanwhile, risks remain of a double-dip recession in the US and sharper slowdown in the large emerging economies. Near term developments depend critically on factors that are largely beyond the control of governments. As this is being written, leaders of the major European Union (EU) countries are still seeking to implement a set of credible policies to establish an orderly process for managing sovereign debt in Greece, to prevent risks from spreading to other economies in the euro zone, to recapitalize banks affected by likely sovereign debt write downs, and to establish a more unified and effective fiscal framework for euro zone (EZ) states. Uncertainty over their ability to successfully conclude this process, as well a series of ratings downgrades, stock market volatility and uncertainty over US deficit policies have shaken investor and business confidence and kept consumers wary. Most forecasters have already reduced their projections for global growth in the US and the EU by a percent or more.
Databáze: OpenAIRE