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April 17-19, 2002
A symposium jointly sponsored by the Federal Reserve
Bank of Boston and the Journal of Financial Intermediation
The 1990 recession had a significant impact on the
financial landscape both in the United States and in
the rest of the world. Large numbers of financial institutions
failed, problems in the financial sector reduced credit
availability to the real economy, and the recovery from
the recession was unusually slow. Are future economic
slowdowns likely to have a similar impact on the financial
services industry? How are economic slowdowns likely
to affect bank financial condition, bank risk management,
and bank and financial holding company supervision?
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Papers and Presentations
Internal Ratings,
the Business Cycle, and Capital Requirements: Some Evidence
from an Emerging Market Economy (265K) 
Miguel Angel Segoviano
London School of Economics and Political Science
Philip Lowe
Bank for International Settlements
Procyclicality and the
New Basel Accord Banks Choice of Loan Rating
System (740K) 
Eva Catarineu-Rabell
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona and Bank of
England
Patricia Jackson and Dimitrios P. Tsomocos
Bank of England
Economic Cycles and
Bank Health (210K)
John Jordan and Eric Rosengren
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Banking Stability, Reputational
Rents, and the Stock Market: Should Bank Regulators
Care about Stock Prices (295K)
Anjan V. Thakor
University of Michigan
Bank Deposit Insurance
and Business Cycles: Controlling the Volatility of Risk-Based
Premiums (541K)
George G. Pennacchi
University of Illinois
Loan Loss Provisioning
and Economic Slowdowns: Too Much Too Late?
(215K)
Luc Laeven and Giovanni Majnoni
World Bank
Loss Underreporting
and the Auditing Role of Bank Exams (150K)
Jeffery W. Gunther and Robert R. Moore
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Equity and Bond Market
Signals as Leading Indicators of Bank Fragility
(326K) 
Reint Gropp, Jukka Vesala, and Giuseppe Vulpes
European Central Bank
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