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In the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, there have been
many criticisms weighed against private credit rating agencies.
Many claim they only exacerbate financial market volatility by
issuing faulty public statements, ratings warnings, and downgrades.
This instability increases the uncertainty in business environments
and weakens the pace of business investment. Their rating changes
also prompt national governments to reduce their spending at a time
when fiscal expenditures are crucial for economic recovery. Public
Credit Rating Agencies argues for the creation of national public
credit rating agencies, offering the first in-depth discussion of
their implied role and function operating alongside private
agencies. Schroeder provides an up-to-date overview of the ratings
industry and the government bodies that monitor its activities. She
suggests that the proper implementation of public credit rating
agencies will promote the stability of lending, further development
and adaptation of new technology, and increase labor productivity
and the profitability of new investment in businesses. Finally,
this book clarifies the inconsistencies that have surfaced between
public budgeting and a rating agency's evaluation of national
budgets.
Political economy focuses on issues that are fundamental to
individual and collective well-being and rests on the proposition
that economic phenomena do not occur in isolation from social and
political processes. One leading Australian political economist is
Frank Stilwell. Highlights of his work include concerns with the
creation and use of wealth, inequalities between rich and poor, the
spatial implications of economic growth, and the tensions between
economic growth and the environment. Stilwell has been especially
prominent in developing alternative economic policies, with seminal
contributions to understanding the radical shift in Australian
economic and social policies since the early 1980s. He has also
been a leader in the teaching of political economy to many cohorts
of first-year university students. This collection, spanning these
themes, honours Stilwell's contribution to Australian political
economy after more than 40 years teaching at the University of
Sydney. The book provides not only an opportunity to appreciate his
contribution but also a greater understanding of these themes which
remain of crucial contemporary relevance.
Political economy focuses on issues that are fundamental to
individual and collective well-being and rests on the proposition
that economic phenomena do not occur in isolation from social and
political processes. One leading Australian political economist is
Frank Stilwell. Highlights of his work include concerns with the
creation and use of wealth, inequalities between rich and poor, the
spatial implications of economic growth, and the tensions between
economic growth and the environment. Stilwell has been especially
prominent in developing alternative economic policies, with seminal
contributions to understanding the radical shift in Australian
economic and social policies since the early 1980s. He has also
been a leader in the teaching of political economy to many cohorts
of first-year university students. This collection, spanning these
themes, honours Stilwell's contribution to Australian political
economy after more than 40 years teaching at the University of
Sydney. The book provides not only an opportunity to appreciate his
contribution but also a greater understanding of these themes which
remain of crucial contemporary relevance.
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