Eric Santor - Latest - Bank of Canada
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Bank of Canada RSS Feedsen2024-03-29T00:01:18+00:00Financial Constraints and Investment: Assessing the Impact of a World Bank Loan Program on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Sri Lanka
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2003/12/working-paper-2003-37/
The authors examine the investment behaviour of a sample of small, credit-constrained firms in Sri Lanka. Using a unique panel-data set, they analyze and compare the activities of two groups of small firms distinguished by their different access to financing; one group consists of firms with heavily subsidized loans from the World Bank, and the other consists of firms without such subsidies.2003-12-01T16:02:29+00:00enFinancial Constraints and Investment: Assessing the Impact of a World Bank Loan Program on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Sri Lanka2003-12-01Development economicsWorking Paper 2003-37 https://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/wp03-37.pdfFinancial Constraints and Investment: Assessing the Impact of a World Bank Loan Program on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Sri LankaVarouj AivazianDipak MazumdarEric SantorDecember 2003GG0G00OO1O16Do Peer Group Members Outperform Individual Borrowers? A Test of Peer Group Lending Using Canadian Micro-Credit Data
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2003/10/working-paper-2003-33/
Microfinance institutions now serve over 10 million poor households in the developing and developed world, and much of their success has been attributed to their innovative use of peer group lending. There is very little empirical evidence, however, to suggest that group lending schemes offer a superior institutional design over lending programs that serve individual borrowers.2003-10-04T14:22:52+00:00enDo Peer Group Members Outperform Individual Borrowers? A Test of Peer Group Lending Using Canadian Micro-Credit Data2003-10-04Development economicsWorking Paper 2003-33 https://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/wp03-33.pdfDo Peer Group Members Outperform Individual Borrowers? A Test of Peer Group Lending Using Canadian Micro-Credit DataRafael GomezEric SantorOctober 2003EJJ2J23OO1O17Banking Crises and Contagion: Empirical Evidence
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2003/02/working-paper-2003-1/
Recent events, such as the East Asian, Mexican, Scandinavian, and Argentinian crises, have sparked considerable interest in exploring how shocks experienced by one country can spread vis-à-vis real and nominal links to other countries' banking systems. Given the large costs associated with banking-system failures, both economists and policy-makers are interested in predicting the onset of banking crises and assessing the likelihood of contagion during crisis events.2003-02-01T15:36:05+00:00enBanking Crises and Contagion: Empirical Evidence2003-02-01International topicsWorking Paper 2003-1 https://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/wp03-1.pdfBanking Crises and Contagion: Empirical EvidenceEric SantorFebruary 2003FF3F30GG2G20