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Full-Text Articles in Business

Green Space, Ellen Mcmahon Jan 2005

Green Space, Ellen Mcmahon

Ellen McMahon

Thoughts triggered by the view from my apartment in Grbavica.


Thoughts On Travel And Doors, Ellen Mcmahon Jan 2005

Thoughts On Travel And Doors, Ellen Mcmahon

Ellen McMahon

Sometimes the most basic and common activities pose the biggest challenges when you travel. With a bit of humor and a commitment to solve the problem much can be learned, about your host country and yourself.


Financial Crises And The Presence Of Foreign Banks, Adrian E. Tschoegl Jan 2005

Financial Crises And The Presence Of Foreign Banks, Adrian E. Tschoegl

Adrian E Tschoegl

Foreign banks have entered many transition and emerging economies in recent years, sometimes before economic and banking crises have developed, and often after. Today, in a number of countries foreign banks own as much as 90 per cent or more of the banking systems’ assets. The question then arises as to what the effect of the foreign presence is on crises. This chapter first discusses the motives, modes and regulation of foreign banks. In analyzing foreign entry, it is important to distinguish between classic or traditional foreign banks and the innovators, which in turn one can classify either as “bettors”, …


Destiny - The Reflections Of A Surfing Professor, Dave Robinson Dr. Jan 2005

Destiny - The Reflections Of A Surfing Professor, Dave Robinson Dr.

Dave Robinson Dr.

No abstract provided.


Reservoirs Of The Future, Karl P. Sauvant Jan 2005

Reservoirs Of The Future, Karl P. Sauvant

Karl P. Sauvant

Foreign direct investment (FDI) flows could be considerably higher than they are currently. This article looks at the various reservoirs from which additional FDI flows cold come from in the future.


Foreign Banks In Bulgaria, 1875-2002, Adrian E. Tschoegl, Kenneth Koford Jan 2005

Foreign Banks In Bulgaria, 1875-2002, Adrian E. Tschoegl, Kenneth Koford

Adrian E Tschoegl

We apply the analogy from biology of ecological succession that follows natural disasters as a conceptual framework for the history of foreign banks in Bulgaria. We argue that the current predominance of foreign banks is unlikely to be permanent, even without government action. The argument should also apply to other countries that have incurred sever financial collapse. In the case of Bulgaria, foreign banks have entered several times—before World War I, after that war, and after the fall of Communism in the early 1990s. The same source countries and even some of the same banks that were present before World …