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Banking crisis in Sweden and Denmark and governmental interventions

Corsi, Natali LU (2023) STVK02 20231
Department of Political Science
Abstract
Crisis in the financial sector have come to be a natural part of the economic
cycles, as well as the compulsory regulatory measures that follow. These
processes have been documented since the beginning of financial revolutions
where the states and financial institutions are intertwined in an eternal dance ever
since. Both external chocks and internal innovations can spark booms or busts.
But how much should the governments be involved in the private sector and who
benefits from the regulations? At least one theory, The Theory of Economic
Regulation, is sceptic of a wider public having interest in these regulations. The
reasoning being that only larger companies start the process of regulatory
frameworks, all in their own interest.... (More)
Crisis in the financial sector have come to be a natural part of the economic
cycles, as well as the compulsory regulatory measures that follow. These
processes have been documented since the beginning of financial revolutions
where the states and financial institutions are intertwined in an eternal dance ever
since. Both external chocks and internal innovations can spark booms or busts.
But how much should the governments be involved in the private sector and who
benefits from the regulations? At least one theory, The Theory of Economic
Regulation, is sceptic of a wider public having interest in these regulations. The
reasoning being that only larger companies start the process of regulatory
frameworks, all in their own interest. Au contraire points other researches to,
meaning that these regulations have always been in the interest of the general
public and are essential as shock-absorbers in the volatile modern economies.
Two highly comparable Nordic countries of Sweden and Denmark, with
independent histories of market economy come under the investigation. Material
comes from empirical data and evidence in a multiple case study from nineteenth,
twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Despite a varied degree of political
involvement seen in these cases, the measures taken are very similar and with
comparable end results. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Corsi, Natali LU
supervisor
organization
course
STVK02 20231
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Banking crisis Denmark, Banking crisis Sweden, Theory of Economic Regulation, governmental intervention, regulations in financial sector, history of banking.
language
English
id
9115368
date added to LUP
2023-08-18 15:37:50
date last changed
2023-08-18 15:37:50
@misc{9115368,
  abstract     = {{Crisis in the financial sector have come to be a natural part of the economic
cycles, as well as the compulsory regulatory measures that follow. These
processes have been documented since the beginning of financial revolutions
where the states and financial institutions are intertwined in an eternal dance ever
since. Both external chocks and internal innovations can spark booms or busts.
But how much should the governments be involved in the private sector and who
benefits from the regulations? At least one theory, The Theory of Economic
Regulation, is sceptic of a wider public having interest in these regulations. The
reasoning being that only larger companies start the process of regulatory
frameworks, all in their own interest. Au contraire points other researches to,
meaning that these regulations have always been in the interest of the general
public and are essential as shock-absorbers in the volatile modern economies.
Two highly comparable Nordic countries of Sweden and Denmark, with
independent histories of market economy come under the investigation. Material
comes from empirical data and evidence in a multiple case study from nineteenth,
twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Despite a varied degree of political
involvement seen in these cases, the measures taken are very similar and with
comparable end results.}},
  author       = {{Corsi, Natali}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Banking crisis in Sweden and Denmark and governmental interventions}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}