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  2. Financial stability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_stability

    Financial stability is the absence of system-wide episodes in which a financial crisis occurs and is characterised as an economy with low volatility. It also involves financial systems' stress-resilience being able to cope with both good and bad times. Financial stability is the aim of most governments and central banks. The aim is not to ...

  3. Hyman Minsky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyman_Minsky

    Thomas I. Palley, "The Limits of Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis as an Explanation of the Crisis," Monthly Review, Volume 61, Issue 11 (April 2010). Thomas I. Palley, "A Theory of Minsky Super-Cycles and Financial Crises," Contributions to Political Economy, 30 (1), 31 – 46.

  4. Minsky moment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minsky_moment

    The more general concept of a "Minsky cycle" consists of a repetitive chain of Minsky moments: a period of stability encourages risk taking, which leads to a period of instability when risks are realized as losses, which quickly exhausts participants into risk-averse trading (de-leveraging), restoring stability and setting up the next cycle.

  5. Debt deflation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debt_deflation

    Debt deflation is a theory that recessions and depressions are due to the overall level of debt rising in real value because of deflation, causing people to default on their consumer loans and mortgages. Bank assets fall because of the defaults and because the value of their collateral falls, leading to a surge in bank insolvencies, a reduction ...

  6. Systemic risk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemic_risk

    [1] [2] [3] It can be defined as "financial system instability, potentially catastrophic, caused or exacerbated by idiosyncratic events or conditions in financial intermediaries". [4] It refers to the risks imposed by interlinkages and interdependencies in a system or market, where the failure of a single entity or cluster of entities can cause ...

  7. Modern monetary theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Monetary_Theory

    Modern monetary theory or modern money theory (MMT) is a heterodox [1] macroeconomic theory that describes currency as a public monopoly and unemployment as evidence that a currency monopolist is overly restricting the supply of the financial assets needed to pay taxes and satisfy savings desires. [2]

  8. Business cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_cycle

    A primary theory in this vein is the debt deflation theory of Irving Fisher, which he proposed to explain the Great Depression. A more recent complementary theory is the Financial Instability Hypothesis of Hyman Minsky, and the credit theory of economic cycles is often associated with Post-Keynesian economics such as Steve Keen.

  9. Economic stability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_stability

    US federal minimum wage if it had kept pace with productivity. Also, the real minimum wage. Real macroeconomic output can be decomposed into a trend and a cyclical part, where the variance of the cyclical series derived from the filtering technique (e.g., the band-pass filter, or the most commonly used Hodrick–Prescott filter) serves as the primary measure of departure from economic stability.