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This book analyzes the banking crisis and the events surrounding it
in Hungary and other emerging EU member countries in 2007-2013.
Written by Julia Kiraly, a former policymaker, and the Deputy
Governor of the Hungarian Central Bank at the time of the crisis,
it also offers a firsthand account of the processes in and
responses to the financial crisis. While there is extensive
literature on the crisis, most of it focuses on the US or the
Eurozone, sometimes mentioning the "emerging world" in passing.
However, Central and Eastern Europe experienced the crisis very
differently than other emerging countries. In the pre-crisis years,
the region in accession to the EU attracted abundant fresh capital,
but the seemingly unconstrained global liquidity fuelled credit
bubbles. After the Lehman crisis, capital rapidly fled these
countries. In this part of the world, the recession proved to be
much worse than elsewhere, with double-digit growth soon turning
into a double-digit decline in GDP. Several countries had to turn
to the IMF and the EU for stand-by credit. Based on her own inside
experience as a top central banker, the author offers a personal
yet professional analysis of the causes and consequences of the
financial hurricane.
This book analyzes the banking crisis and the events surrounding it
in Hungary and other emerging EU member countries in 2007-2013.
Written by Julia Kiraly, a former policymaker, and the Deputy
Governor of the Hungarian Central Bank at the time of the crisis,
it also offers a firsthand account of the processes in and
responses to the financial crisis. While there is extensive
literature on the crisis, most of it focuses on the US or the
Eurozone, sometimes mentioning the "emerging world" in passing.
However, Central and Eastern Europe experienced the crisis very
differently than other emerging countries. In the pre-crisis years,
the region in accession to the EU attracted abundant fresh capital,
but the seemingly unconstrained global liquidity fuelled credit
bubbles. After the Lehman crisis, capital rapidly fled these
countries. In this part of the world, the recession proved to be
much worse than elsewhere, with double-digit growth soon turning
into a double-digit decline in GDP. Several countries had to turn
to the IMF and the EU for stand-by credit. Based on her own inside
experience as a top central banker, the author offers a personal
yet professional analysis of the causes and consequences of the
financial hurricane.
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