Search: Four Pillars Policy
RBA Glossary definition for Four Pillars Policy
Four Pillars Policy – An Australian Government policy that there should be no fewer than four major banks to maintain appropriate levels of competition in the banking sector.
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China's Institutional Impediments to Productivity Growth | Conference – 2016
18 Mar 2016
Conferences
To better examine the effect on productivity of major policy regime shifts, we divide the entire period covered by the current version of the CIP data, 1980–2012, into four ... Indeed, restructuring for healthy and sustainable growth is the most
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2016/wu.html
Change and Constancy in the Financial System: Implications for Financial Distress and Policy | Conference – 2007
20 Aug 2007
Conferences
The conclusion summarises the key points and assesses the prospects for policy action. ... 4. Policy. This view of financial instability also has significant implications for policy.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2007/borio.html
What Have We Learned in the Past 50 Years about the International Financial Architecture? | Conference – 2010
9 Feb 2010
Conferences
Balance of payments adjustment would be managed through domestic fiscal and monetary policies. ... needed to demonstrate the ultimate negative consequences of unsustainable policies, and to seek mutually acceptable solutions.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2010/crockett.html
Housing Prices and Entrepreneurship: Evidence for the Housing Collateral Channel in Australia | Conference – 2015
19 Mar 2015
Conferences
Furthermore, it is generally believed that new businesses contribute disproportionately to employment and output growth, implying that this channel of monetary policy transmission could be quite strong. ... the postcode in which the company's
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2015/connolly-lacava-read.html
Credibility, Flexibility and Renewal: The Evolution of Inflation Targeting in Canada | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
1.2. MB. In February 1991, Canada became the second country, after New Zealand, to adopt an inflation target as a central pillar of its monetary policy framework, along with a ... In other words, non-monetary policies, primarily fiscal policy, but also
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/carter-mendes-schembri.html
Liquidity, Financial Crises and the Lender of Last Resort – How Much of a Departure is the Sub-prime Crisis? | Conference – 2008
14 Jul 2008
Conferences
There is also typically qualitative oversight of liquidity policy in the context of prudential supervision (Pillar 2 of Basel II). ... A further cost is conflict with other policies. There may be conflicts with the monetary policy regime, unless
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2008/davis.html
Introduction | Conference – 2006
23 Jul 2006
Conferences
Four papers examine the potential effects of population ageing by means of theoretical models. ... The paper focuses on three areas where policy intervention might be especially productive.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2006/intro-2006.html
The Australian Economic ‘Miracle’: A View from the North | Conference – 2000
24 Jul 2000
Conferences
The other significant macroeconomic policy error was the handing by the Europeans of German re-unification. ... Governments in all four of the regions under consideration now have monetary policy delegated to an independent central bank.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2000/bean.html
Policy Panel | Conference – 2012
20 Aug 2012
Conferences
Another pillar of housing sector performance is prudential policy. Brazilian regulations have been generally conservative with high capital adequacy ratios (the minimum level in Brazil is 11 per cent against the ... Whenever such policies were introduced,
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2012/policy-panel-2012.html
Wrap-up Discussion | Conference – 2007
20 Aug 2007
Conferences
Indeed, the frequency of these policy interventions raises the question of whether monetary policy can successfully moderate the economic cycle (as opposed to aggravating it), if every four years or so – ... What then are the possible lessons for
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2007/wrap-up-disc-2007.html