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GDP OF THE G7 AFTER THE FINANCIAL CRISIS
Published 2024-12-01“…The objective of the paper is to examine the dynamics of the GDP and the GDP per capita of the G7 nations after the financial crisis of 2008-2009. Methodology. The data, taken from the official sites of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, the United Nations, as well as monographs, articles, etc. served as the information source for using various methods, including those of experts’ assessments, comparative, graphic analysis, etc. …”
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Crisis risk in the 21st century and their impact on the banking sector
Published 2020-01-01“…Just over a decade after the outbreak of the global economic crisis in 2008, the world is once again facing a global crisis caused by the Covid-19 virus pandemic. …”
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Exchange rate policy in Republic of Serbia in conditions of the global economic crisis and Covid-19 pandemic: Similarities and differences
Published 2024-01-01“…The topic of the paper is the foreign exchange market and the dinar exchange rate, with a primary focus on the functioning of exchange rates and the analysis of foreign exchange markets during global financial crises in the period 2008-2010 and during the 2019-2021 crisis caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. …”
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IGJR 1/2020: Housing crisis: How can we improve the situation for young people?
Published 2018-12-01“…The quality of housing is a key factor in living standards and wellbeing, as well as an integral element of social integration, yet in 2014 a total of 7.8% of young people in the European Union (aged between 15 and 29) were in severe housing need, 25.7% of the young people in the EU lived in overcrowded households, and 13.6% lived in households that spent 40% or more of their equivalised disposable income on housing (Eurostat 2016). In response to the 2008/9 financial crisis, government programmes for public and social housing aimed at the poorer parts of the population were cut back, leading to diminishing access to affordable housing, especially in urbanised areas. …”
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IGJR 1/2020: Housing crisis: How can we improve the situation for young people?
Published 2019-07-01“…The quality of housing is a key factor in living standards and wellbeing, as well as an integral element of social integration, yet in 2014 a total of 7.8% of young people in the European Union (aged between 15 and 29) were in severe housing need, 25.7% of the young people in the EU lived in overcrowded households, and 13.6% lived in households that spent 40% or more of their equivalised disposable income on housing (Eurostat 2016). In response to the 2008/9 financial crisis, government programmes for public and social housing aimed at the poorer parts of the population were cut back, leading to diminishing access to affordable housing, especially in urbanised areas. …”
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Editorial
Published 2020-06-01“…It is too soon to tell how Covid-19 will affect housing access and affordability, but it is already clear that younger generations are experiencing a second “once-in-alifetime” crisis in their critical early adult years. The first, a global financial crisis, was triggered by the 2008 US housing market crash. …”
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