ABFER 11th ANNUAL CONFERENCE
The ABFER 11th Annual Conference will be held on 20-23 May 2024 at the Pan Pacific Singapore
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11th ASIAN MONETARY POLICY FORUM
The 11th Asian Monetary Policy Forum (AMPF) will commence on 23 May 2024 at the Pan Pacific Singapore with a joint dinner with ABFER, followed by the forum on 24 May 2024 at Conrad Centennial Singapore
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CAPITAL MARKET DEVELOPMENT: CHINA AND ASIA
Webinar series on every third Thursday of the month
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INNOVATION, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, AND CHALLENGES IN THE DIGITAL ERA: ASIA AND BEYOND
Webinar series on every first Wednesday of the month
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INDUSTRY OUTREACH PANEL
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  • ABFER 11th ANNUAL CONFERENCE
  • 11th ASIAN MONETARY POLICY FORUM
  • CAPITAL MARKET DEVELOPMENT: CHINA AND ASIA
  • INNOVATION, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, AND CHALLENGES IN THE DIGITAL ERA: ASIA AND BEYOND
  • INDUSTRY OUTREACH PANEL

WORKING PAPERS

 

Webinar Series

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Innovation, Productivity and Challenges in the Digital Era: Asia and Beyond

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Apr 2023

Webinar Series

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Capital Market Development: China and Asia

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Dec 2023

Webinar Series

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Capital Market Development: China and Asia

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Nov 2023

SOME IMPORTANT FACTS ABOUT US

2800 SUBMITTED Papers submitted to
Annual Conference
7366 AUTHORS Representing number
of authors
553 PRESENTED Papers presented at
Annual Conferences
186 JOURNALS Papers published in
significant journals
4200 PARTICIPANTS Participants at
Annual Conferences

Specialty Conference

 
 

specialty-2017.jpg

 
16
Jan
2017
Monday
 


 
17
Jan
2017
Tuesday
 


Session Format

Sessions Duration
Presentation 25 minutes
Discussants 10 minutes
Open discussion 15 minutes

Organising Committee

  • Alex Popov (European Central Bank)
  • Fadi Hassan (London School of Economics)
  • Bernard Yeung (National University of Singapore)
  • Filippo di Mauro (National University of Singapore)
  • Edward Robinson (Monetary Authority of Singapore)
  • Cyn-Young Park (Asian Development Bank)
  • Peter Morgan (Asian Development Bank Institute)

Keynote Speakers

Shadow Banking: Economics and Policy

The talk will review shadow banking: what is its economic value and how does it cater to various demands. Since there is much confusion about what shadow banking is, it will first define shadow banking as “all financial activities, except traditional banking, which require a private or public backstop to operate”. Backstops can come in the form of franchise value of a bank or insurance company, a government guarantee, or a legal privilege. The need for a backstop is a crucial feature of shadow banking and distinguishes it from the usual intermediated capital market activities, such as market-making, broking and underwriting, and related entities, such as custodians, hedge funds, and investment companies. The talk will then focus on two important shadow banking functions: securitization – to create safe assets, and collateral intermediation – to help reduce counterparty risks and facilitate secured transactions. After describing the operations and reviewing the economics and demand factors behind these two functions, the talk will review the systemic risks that can arise from them. It then discusses associated policy priorities, both to reduce spillovers from the shadow banking system to the main banking system and to allow for reduced procyclicality and systemic risk within the shadow banking system.


Finance and Growth – What Have We Learned

The talk will discuss the findings of the finance and growth literature over the past two decades and point to some recent findings and a rethinking of financial sector challenges post-crisis.