GLOBALIZATION AND MASS HYSTERIA: “BLOOD LIBEL” BOOK

May 31, 2008 at 10:58 pm | In Arabs, Books, Globalization, History, Middle East, Research | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg

libel.jpg

Blood Libel: The Damascus Affair of 1840

by Ronald Florence (Author)

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

On February 6, 1840, Father Thomas, a Capuchin monk, and his assistant disappeared in the vicinity of Damascus after paying a not unusual visit to the city’s Jewish quarter. Within a day, the small, multidenominational Christian community banded together, claiming, “The Jews sacrificed the Father.” This blood libel (the charge that Jews killed Christians to use their blood in religious rituals) shattered the relative peace in which the Jewish community had lived under Muslim rule. Two Jews confessed under torture and then died in prison, unleashing a massive assault in which 65 Jewish schoolboys (some as young as five) and 75 men were imprisoned. As the situation dramatically escalated—a noted rabbi converted to Islam and the French, British and American consuls became involved with the prosecution—the case became an international cause célèbre and eventually a goad to political change in the area. This is great material, and Florence, a novelist (Zeppelin) and historian, handles it with dramatic flair and meticulous documentation. While this is not as complete a historical account as Jonathan Frankel’s magisterial 1997 The Damascus Affair, it’s an excellent work of popular history.

Washington Jewish Week Online, Aaron Leibel
Well-written and researched, this book takes the reader inside a pogrom to see how it developed.

Product Details:

  • Paperback: 272 pages

  • Publisher: Other Press (October 17, 2006)

  • Language: English

  • ISBN-10: 1590512391

  • ISBN-13: 978-1590512395

Blood Libel: The Damascus Affair of 1840

by Ronald Florence (Author)

CAMBRIDGE FORECAST GROUP: CFG BOOKMARKS

May 31, 2008 at 10:29 pm | In Books, Globalization, History, Research, Science & Technology | Leave a Comment

CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT: JAPAN INITIATIVE TO SUPPORT DEVELOPMENT

May 31, 2008 at 6:41 pm | In Development, Economics, Financial, Germany, Globalization, Japan, Research, Third World, World-system | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg


SB28 Side Event on Aligning Climate and

Development

Monday, June 2

bounce-778022-241724@lists.iisd.ca

on behalf of Junko Morizane

morizane@oecc.or.jp

Junko Morizane (morizane@oecc.or.jp)

Climate Change Info Mailing List (climate-l@lists.iisd.ca)

morizane@oecc.or.jp

Sat 5/31/08

Aligning Climate and Development –From Concept to a Realistic Operation: Japan’s New Initiative to Support Developing Countries-, at 13:00-15:00 on Monday, 2 June at MoT METRO.

Dear Climate-L Reader

We are pleased to invite you to the side event at SB28 in Bonn on:

Aligning Climate and Development –From Concept to a Realistic Operation: Japan’s New Initiative to Support Developing Countries-, at 13:00-15:00 on Monday, 2 June at MoT METRO.

The Event is supported and jointly organized by the Ministry of the Environment, Japan (MOEJ) and Overseas Environmental Cooperation Center, Japan (OECC).

Development is a priority matter for all developing countries. To address climate change effectively, it is vital to align climate and development policies in developing countries. Discussion includes Japan’s new initiative “Cool Earth Partnership” to support developing countries in efforts to address climate change, driven by recently held G8 Kobe Environmental Ministers Meeting and the planned G8 Hokkaido Toyako Summit to be held in July 2008.

Chair and Speakers are the following;

Chair Mr. Taka Hiraishi, Co-Chair of IPCC Inventory Programme

Ms. Akiko Nakagawa, Ministry of the Environment, Japan

Ms. Yuka Murakami, Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC)

Mr. Demetrio Ignacio, Jr., Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Philippines (TBC)

Ms. Aree Wattana Tummakird, Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE), Thailand (TBC)

Mr. Makoto Kato, Senior Researcher, OECC

Please find more information on our side event and the Asia-Pacific Gateway to Climate and Development at the AP-Gateway website.

www.climateanddevelopment.org

Please come and join us our side event.

Sincerely yours,

Junko Morizane

*********************************************************

Junko Morizane, Ms

Researcher

Overseas Environmental Cooperation Center (OECC)

phone: +81-3-5472-0144

fax: +81-3-5472-0145

email: morizane@oecc.or.jp

URL: http://www.kyomecha.org/e/

*********************************************************

SB28 Side Event on Aligning Climate and

Development

Monday, June 2

bounce-778022-241724@lists.iisd.ca

on behalf of Junko Morizane

(morizane@oecc.or.jp)

Junko Morizane (morizane@oecc.or.jp)

Climate Change Info Mailing List

(climate-l@lists.iisd.ca)

morizane@oecc.or.jp

Sat 5/31/08

AVIATION AND CARBON MARKETS: MONTREAL WORKSHOP JUNE 18 2008

May 31, 2008 at 2:11 pm | In Economics, Financial, Globalization, Research, Science & Technology | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg

ICAO Aviation and Carbon Markets Workshop

18 19 June 2008 – Reminder

ICAO Workshop 18 19 June 2008

“Aviation and Carbon Markets”

Ferrier, Blandine (BFerrier@icao.int)

Climate Change Info Mailing List

(climate-l@lists.iisd.ca)

Sat 5/31/08

Dear Climate-L readers,

This unique two-day event will bring together top financial, industry and environment experts to discuss international civil aviation in a global carbon market.

The event will familiarize participants with key issues related to aviation emissions and carbon markets. A variety of approaches including emissions trading and carbon offset programmes will be addressed.

The workshop will include a broad discussion of the pros and cons of market initiatives for aviation emissions and the opportunities for a global aviation carbon market.

The subject matter will be of particular interest to persons involved with aviation and environmental protection in ICAO Contracting States, governments, international organizations, aviation industries, financial institutions, and academic/ research institutions.

The workshop will be conducted in English and will be free of charge.

As the number of participants is limited, advance registration will be required.

http://www.icao.int/2008WACM/

We are looking forward to see you in Montreal.

Sincerely,

Blandine Ferrier

Environmental Unit

International Civil Aviation Organization

AO Aviation and Carbon Markets Workshop

18 19 June 2008 – Reminder

ICAO Workshop 18 19 June 2008

“Aviation and Carbon Markets”

Ferrier, Blandine (BFerrier@icao.int)

Climate Change Info Mailing List (climate-l@lists.iisd.ca)

Sat 5/31/08

QUEST FOR WESTERN UNIQUENESS: REMI BRAGUE BOOKS “ECCENTRIC CIVILIZATION” AND “THE LAW OF GOD”

May 31, 2008 at 1:44 pm | In Books, Globalization, History | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg

eccentricciv.jpg

lawgod.jpg

Eccentric Culture:

A Theory of Western Civilization

by Remi Brague (Author)

Samuel Lester (Translator)

Editorial Reviews

Book Description

Western culture, which influenced the whole world, came from Europe. But its roots are not there. They are in Athens and Jerusalem. European culture takes its bearing from references that are not in Europe: Europe is eccentric.

What makes the West unique? What is the driving force behind its culture? Rémi Brague takes up these questions in Eccentric Culture. This is not another dictionary of European culture, nor a measure of the contributions of a particular individual, religion, or national tradition. The author’s interest is especially, with regard to the transmission of that culture, to articulate the dynamic tension that has propelled Europe and more generally the West toward civilization. It is this mainspring of European culture, this founding principle, that Brague calls “Roman.

Yet the author’s intent is not to write a history of Europe, and less yet to defend the historical reality of the Roman Empire. Brague rather isolates and generalizes one aspect of that history or, one might say, cultural myth, of ancient Rome. The Roman attitude senses its own incompleteness and recognizes the call to borrow from what went before it.

Historically, it has led the West to borrow from the great traditions of Jerusalem and Athens: primarily the Jewish and Christian tradition, on the one hand, and the classical Greek tradition on the other. Nowhere does the author find this Roman character so strongly present as in the Christian and particularly Catholic attitude toward the incarnation.

At once an appreciation of the richness and diversity of the sources and their fruit, Eccentric Culture points as well to the fragility of their nourishing principle. As such, Brague finds in it not only a means of understanding the past, but of projecting a future in (re)proposing to the West, and to Europe in particular, a model relationship of what is proper to it.

An international bestseller (translated from the original French edition of Europe, La Voie Romaine), this work has been or is presently being translated into thirteen languages.

Language Notes
Text: English (translation)
Original Language: French


Product Details:

  • Hardcover: 205 pages

  • Publisher: St. Augustine’s Press (October 2002)

  • Language: English

  • ISBN-10: 1890318140

  • ISBN-13: 978-1890318147

The Law of God:

The Philosophical History of an Idea

by Remi Brague (Author)

Lydia G. Cochrane (Translator)

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

What makes a law “divine”? What characteristics does that divinity confer on the law? How can we describe societies in which human behavior is regulated by laws characterized as divine? Why has modernity abandoned the premodern notion of divine law as the foundation of social practice? Brague, who teaches philosophy at the Sorbonne and the University of Munich, addresses these and other questions in a book that is unfortunately bogged down in pedestrian prose and pedantic style. He explores the idea of divine law and its regulation of society as it developed in ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia and Israel and functioned as a component of Christianity and Islam at least through the Middle Ages. By the time of the Enlightenment, however, the law had been torn away from divinity and become a function of the secular state. Modern society thought of law as simply a human instrument rather than a divine mandate. Though the topic is potentially fruitful, Brague adds little new or startling to the discussion of divine law. Through his chronological exploration of the devolution from divine law to human law, he tells a story about religion and society that is already well known.

Review
“This new book by Remi Brague features the same outstanding scholarship and skills that have characterized his previous works: deep knowledge of the languages, as well as an extensive mastery of the theology, philosophy, and religious thought of ancient and medieval Islam, Judaism, and Western and Eastern Christianity. With an impressive genealogy, he traces the roots of modernity back to these three intellectual traditions that have worked together (and fought each other) through history. And we cannot ignore the possibility that this triple origin may frame our future as much as, or even more than, anything postmodernity might allow us to foresee.” (Jean-Luc Marion, author of God without Being )


“Brague’s sense of intellectual adventure is what makes his work genuinely exciting to read. The Law of God offers a challenge that anyone concerned with today’’s religious struggles ought to take up.”-Adam Kirsch, New York Sun (Adam Kirsch New York Sun )

“Scholars and students of contemporary world events, to the extent that these may be viewed as a clash of rival fundamentalisms, will have much to gain from Brague’s study. Ideally, in that case, the book seems to be both an obvious primer and launching pad for further scholarship. In such circles, it is not inconceivable that the book may acquire something of a canonical status.”

Patrick Mooney, Times Higher Education Supplement (Patrick, Mooney Times Higher Education Supplement )


Product Details:

  • Hardcover: 384 pages

  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press (May 15, 2007)

  • Language: English

  • ISBN-10: 0226070786

  • ISBN-13: 978-0226070780

Remi Brague

PARADIGM SHIFT: EMERGING WORLD OF THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY: VIEW FROM JAPAN

May 31, 2008 at 5:20 am | In Economics, Financial, Globalization, Japan, World-system | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg

AJISS-Commentary No. 33

Japan Institute of International Affairs

(e-commentary@jiia.or.jp)

Online Publisher: Yukio Satoh

President of The Japan Institute of

International Affairs

AJISS-Commentary No. 33

“Japan’s Role in a New Paradigm Shift”

by Setsuzo Kohsaka

http://www.jiia.or.jp/en_commentary/200805/30-1.html

Fri 5/30/08

Dubai, the ultra modern city that has suddenly appeared out of the desert like a mirage, Abu Dhabi, the operator of the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund, and Qatar, the largest exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG) – these Gulf states have emerged as key players alongside Saudi Arabia in bailing out Western developed countries hit by the subprime crisis.

A new process that arose in the late 20th century with the rise of the so-called BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) and the liberation of East European countries – globalization – is spreading across the globe. It was in 1978 that China embarked on a course of economic reform. Economies like this and others achieved remarkable growth under deflation by serving as the world’s factories, using low-wage labor as leverage. As they grew, however, these countries began seeking resources around the globe to protect their expanding markets. Thus, the world seems to be entering an era of inflation in the 21st century.

In the aftermath of the 1970s’ oil shocks, the term “oil curse” was used to describe oil-rich countries wasting their oil revenues without decent strategies. This time around, it can be said that resource-rich countries have learned their lessons and created sovereign wealth funds to make better use of their surplus revenues. In addition to Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds, such as the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority established in 1977, Norway, Singapore and Russia are accumulating their own state-owned funds. These state-owned funds are flowing into commodity futures markets along with pension funds that have nowhere to go. While the world gross domestic product (GDP) is estimated to have increased by two-fold in the past decade, the amount of money flowing into crude oil futures markets have expanded by twenty-fold. Mahatma Gandhi once said “wealth without work” is a social sin.

To secure resources, emerging countries like China and India are extending ties with politically unstable, corrupt, and even brutal countries. Gandhi also counted “politics without principles” and “commerce without morality” among social sins. The New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, known for his books on globalization, “The Lexus and the Olive Tree” and “The World is Flat,” has argued that the price of oil and the pace of freedom operate in an inverse correlation. Observing countries surfing on the globalization waves, we may be seeing a new form of nation’s being, and the rise of a nationalism nestled to this new form.

Climate change is having a huge impact on this, too. Price hikes for corn, soybeans and sugar cane, eyed as promising alternative sources of energy to petroleum and LNG, shows no sign of abating. Iron ore, coal and nonferrous metals are also reaching astronomical prices. The world economy is shifting from s period of growth under deflation to one of stagflation under inflation.

One of the speakers told the World Water Forum held in The Hague in 2000 that if all countries were to expect the same living standards as the United States, four Earths would be required. Finite resources, wealth-seeking countries, globalization are all flattening the world on the one hand, and expanding the gap between rich and poor countries and rich and poor people, on the other hand. Solving these problems in a shrinking world requires cooperation and mutual concession.

I once heard a lecture by Peter Drucker at a time when Japan’s trade surpluses were causing a serious problem with the United States. In response to an American who asked if Japan’s expanding trade surpluses were posing a threat to the United States, Drucker argued that it was natural for resource-strapped Japan to accumulate a certain level of trade surpluses to prepare for a time when the terms of trade turned advantageously for natural resources and food and not for industrial products.

Japan has virtually no natural resources, domestic oil or gas reserves, and its food self-sufficiency rate has fallen below 40 percent. The time is nearing an end when we can easily assume that necessary resources and food can be bought with foreign reserves gained through exports of industrial products. We must consider the issues of globalization and climate change from a global perspective. The age of mass-production, mass-consumption, and mass-disposal that guided the 20th century is over. Japan gained influence over the world economy in the latter half of the “oil” century alongside the United States. This very fact is making it difficult for Japan to adjust to the new world. A new politico-economic system that takes into account this new paradigm is needed.

[Setsuzo Kohsaka was Trustee of Keizai Douyukai (Japan Association of Corporate Executives) and Chairperson of the Association's discussion group on constitutional issues. Previously, he was Executive Managing Director of Itochu Corporation, a leading Japanese trading company, and Chairman of Kurita Water Industries, Ltd. The views expressed in this piece are the author's own and should not be attributed to The Association of Japanese Institutes of Strategic Studies.]

****************
AJISS-Commentary is an occasional op-ed type publication of The Association of Japanese Institutes of Strategic Studies (AJISS) consisting of four leading Japanese think tanks: Institute for International Policy Studies (IIPS), The Japan Forum on International Relations (JFIR), The Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA), and Research Institute for Peace and Security (RIPS).

http://www.jiia.or.jp/en/commentary/

AJISS-Commentary No. 33

Japan Institute of International Affairs

(e-commentary@jiia.or.jp)

Online Publisher: Yukio Satoh

President of The Japan Institute of International Affairs

AJISS-Commentary No. 33

“Japan’s Role in a New Paradigm Shift” by Setsuzo

Kohsaka

http://www.jiia.or.jp/en_commentary/200805/30-1.html

Fri 5/30/08

CLIMATE PROTECTION

May 31, 2008 at 2:35 am | In Development, Earth, Globalization, Science & Technology, World-system | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg


Strengthening Climate Protection

Under the Montreal Protocol

bounce-777672-241724@lists.iisd.ca

on behalf of aviets@igsd.org

Climate Change Info Mailing List (climate-l@lists.iisd.ca)

aviets@igsd.org

Fri 5/30/08

Dear Climate-L readers,

You may be interested in the current Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) Climate Change News which includes announcements (below) on the entry-into-force of the successful Sept. 2007 accelerated HCFC phase-out adjustment under the Montreal Protocol, and the new proposals submitted by Argentina, Micronesia and Mauritius to further maximize the climate benefits of the Montreal Protocol by addressing CFC and HCFC “banks” contained in old air conditioners and other equipment.

Accelerated Phase-Out of HCFCs Will Cut 16 Billion Tons of GHGs by 2040

A new adjustment to protect stratospheric ozone and mitigate climate change under the Montreal Protocol entered into force May 14. As agreed by all 191 Parties to the Montreal Protocol at the September 2007 meeting, the adjustment to accelerate the phase-out of hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) will reduce climate emissions by 16 billion metric tonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent through 2040, which equals the emissions from 70 million US households for 30 years, according to EPA. The HCFC targeted in the accelerated phase-out can be 2,000 times more potent in contributing to climate change than CO2. The adjustment also provides significant health benefits, avoiding 1,000 deaths from skin cancer in the US alone. “This historic agreement not only helps the recovery of the ozone layer, it also represents one of the single largest steps both the developed and developing countries have taken together to undertake binding international commitments to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” said James Connaughton, Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality.

For more information see:
http://ozone.unep.org/Ratification_status/hcfc_adjuctments_entry_to_force_notice.shtml
http://www.unep.fr/ozonaction/news/hcfcnews.htm
http://www.ewire.com/display.cfm?Wire_ID=4745

Montreal Protocol Parties Submit New Proposals to Maximize Climate Protection

Several Parties who championed the accelerated hydrochlorofluorocarbon (HCFC) adjustment for the Montreal Protocol last year are continuing their efforts this year to maximize the climate benefits of the ozone treaty. Argentina, Micronesia, and Mauritius have submitted proposals to avoid the significant emissions that otherwise will be released from “banks” contained in refrigerators, stationary and mobile air conditioners, thermal insulating foam, and stockpiles of new or recovered ozone-depleting substances (ODS). The United States also was a strong supporter of last year’s HCFC adjustment, and during the Bali climate negotiations in November pledged support to address banks, through a proposed decision (rather than an adjustment). “We know we are getting close to the point-of-no-return for abrupt climate change from the melting of the Arctic Ice and disintegration of the Greenland Ice Sheet, and we know that one of the best ways to slow this down is to strengthen the Montreal Protocol,” said Mr. Sateeaved Seebaluck, Permanent Secretary for the Ministry of Environment for Mauritius.

Cost-effective technology exists to prevent most of the banks emissions that otherwise will “perish” by leakage. Without action, most will be released into the atmosphere by 2015, by which time emissions from CFC banks alone could equal approximately 6.0 to 7.4 billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2eq)—significantly more than the emissions reductions initially sought by the Kyoto Protocol. Conservative calculations of the portion that can be recovered with low cost equal 25 percent or more of the reduction during the first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol. According to Technology and Economic Assessment Panel of the Montreal Protocol, end-of-life measures can help “both ozone and climate, with cumulative savings of around 300,000 ozone depletion potential (ODP) tonnes and about 6 billion tonnes CO2eq” from 2011 to 2050. “Immediate, ‘fast-start’ mitigation is the best adaptation strategy, and if we get started today, we can buy precious time to avoid passing the tipping points for abrupt climate change,” said Ambassador Masao Nakayama, Permanent Representative of the Federated States of Micronesia to the United Nations in New York.

Destruction of banks could accelerate the estimated return of the Effective Equivalent Stratospheric Chlorine to 1980 values by two years, advancing the recovery of the ozone layer. Fast action to address these banks will produce a double dividend on climate and ozone protection. The actions necessary to prevent CFC and HCFC emissions from banks also will reduce emissions of HFCs, further protecting climate.

For more information see:
http://ozone.unep.org/Meeting_Documents/oewg/28oewg/OEWG-28-3-Add1E.pdf
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-worth/need-for-speed-buying-tim_b_102856.html
http://sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/32285/title/Science_%2B_the_Public__Freon%E2%80%99s_Cool_Link_to_Climate
http://sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/32356/title/Science_%2B_the_Public__Help_the_Climate_Empty_the_Fridge
http://foreignaffairs.house.gov/110/nak022708.pdf

———————————————
Ms. Alex Viets
Communications Officer
Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development
INECE Secretariat
2300 Wisconsin Avenue NW, Suite 300B
Washington, DC 20007
+1-213-321-0911 (mobile)
aviets@igsd.org

id=241724.565191bce3a0b970fa3b037670d59ec1&n=T&l=climate-l&o=777672
-
http://www.climate-l.org

A knowledgebase of International Climate Change Activities, provided by IISD in cooperation with the UN Chief Executives Board for Coordination (CEB) Secretariat

IISD Reporting Services for environment and sustainable development policy professionals at http://www.iisd.ca/email/subscribe.htm


Strengthening Climate Protection Under the Montreal Protocol

bounce-777672-241724@lists.iisd.ca

on behalf of aviets@igsd.org

Climate Change Info Mailing List (climate-l@lists.iisd.ca)

aviets@igsd.org

Fri 5/30/08

SURGE IN OIL PRICES: DALLAS FED

May 31, 2008 at 12:38 am | In Economics, Financial, Globalization, Oil & Gas, World-system | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg


Dallas Fed

Crude Awakening:

Behind the Surge in Oil Prices

pubs@mail-list.com

on behalf of Dallas Fed Publications

(dal.webmaster@dal.frb.org)

Fri 5/30/08

“Crude Awakening: Behind the Surge in Oil Prices”
Economic Letter
Vol. 3, No. 5, May 2008
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
http://dallasfed.org/research/eclett/2008/el0805.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This issue attributes the recent surge in oil prices to four factors:
global demand, expectations about future market tightness, the value
of the dollar and fear of supply interruptions.
——————————————————————-

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas publications.

go to
http://dallasfed.org/pubs/e-sub/e-pubs.cfm
We welcome your comments, questions and suggestions.

Please e-mail us at dal.webmaster@dal.frb.org.

2200 N. Pearl St., Dallas, TX 75150

Dallas Fed

Crude Awakening: Behind the Surge in Oil Prices

pubs@mail-list.com

on behalf of Dallas Fed Publications

(dal.webmaster@dal.frb.org)

Fri 5/30/08

BUNDESBANK DISCUSSION PAPERS

May 30, 2008 at 2:28 pm | In Economics, Financial, Globalization, Research | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg

Bundesbank Research Centre

Bundesbank Discussion Paper

Newsletter Forschungszentrum Bundesbank

(vo5555@newsletter.bundesbank.de)

Fri 5/30/08

Dear customer,

“Conference on the Interaction of Market and Credit Risk”

the Bundesbank Research Centre has released the following new Discussion Papers, which are the first of 7 in all (No 08/2008 to 14/2008) quoting contributions to the “Conference on the Interaction of Market and Credit Risk” held on the 6th and 7th of December 2007 in Berlin.

(No 08/2008, Series 2)

Author/s
:
Dragon Yongjun Tang
Hong Yan


Title:


Market conditions, default risk and

credit spreads

Abstract:
This study empirically examines the impact of market
conditions on credit spreads as motivated by recently developed structural credit risk models. Using credit default swap (CDS) spreads, we find that, in the time series, average credit spreads are decreasing in GDP growth rate, but increasing in GDP growth volatility. We document that credit spreads are lower when investor sentiment is high and when the systematic jump risk is low. In the cross section, we confirm that firm-level cash flow volatility raises credit spreads. More importantly, we demonstrate that the impact of market conditions on credit spreads is substantially affected by firm heterogeneity. During economic expansions, ceteris paribus, firms with high cash flow betas have lower credit spreads than those with low cash flow betas. This relation disappears during economic recessions, consistent with theoretical predictions.

(No 09/2008, Series 2)

Author/s:
Nikola Tarashev
Haibin Zhu


Title:

The pricing of correlated default risk:

evidence from the credit derivatives market

Abstract:

In order to analyze the pricing of portfolio credit risk – as revealed by tranche spreads of a popular credit default swap (CDS) index – we extract risk-neutral probabilities of default (PDs) and physical asset return correlations from single-name CDS spreads. The time profile and overall level of index spreads validate our PD measures. At the same time, the physical asset return correlations are too low to account for the spreads of index tranches and, thus, point to a large correlation risk premium. This premium, which covaries negatively with current realized correlations and positively with future realized correlations, sheds light on market perceptions of and attitude towards correlation risk.

http://vo5555.newsletter.bundesbank.de/servlet/rd?l=Diskussionspapiere-JOKA-PJN1-M7DJ-ONL3-NWSL39

+ 01:

Deutsche Bundesbank
Forschungszentrum
Research Centre

Wilhelm-Epstein-Strasse 14
60431 Frankfurt am Main
Germany

+ 02: contact
presse-information@bundesbank.de

Bundesbank Research Centre

Bundesbank Discussion Paper

Newsletter Forschungszentrum Bundesbank

(vo5555@newsletter.bundesbank.de)

Fri 5/30/08

INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL STABILITY AND THE DOLLAR: VIEW FROM TOKYO

May 30, 2008 at 1:31 pm | In Economics, Financial, Globalization, Japan, Research, World-system | Leave a Comment

spin-globe.gif

books-globe.gif

globe-purple.gif

history.gif

world.gif

compass.gif

loudspeaker.gif

globeinmoney.jpg

Update of IIMA Web site

admin (admin@iima.or.jp)

admin@iima.or.jp

Fri 5/30/08

Dear Guests of IIMA,

We are pleased to inform you that our website was updated on May 30, 2008.

The main new contents are as follows.

- Publications
Newsletter No.10,2008

“New Developments on the International Financial Scene Affecting the Credibility of the Dollar(II)”
Hajime Shinohara, Managing Director, IIMA

Newsletter No.9, 2008

“Has the International Financial Instability turned the Corner?”
Toyoo Gyohten, President, IIMA

Please visit our website to find new useful information.

http://www.iima.or.jp/english.htm

Thank you,

Update of IIMA Web site

admin (admin@iima.or.jp)

admin@iima.or.jp

Fri 5/30/08

Next Page »

Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.