In Chapter 6, Muysken and Meijers look at the increase in total assets of the financial sector in the Netherlands over the past 25 years from 600% of GDP in 1995 to over 1400% in 2020. There are specific features of the Dutch economy that caused the financial sector to continue to grow strongly even after the financial crisis. Two outstanding features are the continued growth of net trade surplus and the presence of a funded pension system with defined benefits. The authors analyse the growth of the financial sector in more detail using balance sheet data from the national account statistics. The explicit role of balance sheets and portfolios of financial assets of the various sectors in the model, together with the detailed impact of wealt...
Despite of its reduced population number and small area, the Netherlands is one of the top countries...
This study analyses the composition of the yearly changes that occurred in sectorial balance sheets ...
The aim of the paper is to investigate the qualitative aspects of factors determining current accoun...
In Chapter 6, Muysken and Meijers look at the increase in total assets of the financial sector in th...
In earlier work Meijers, Muysken (and Sleijpen) have developed an open economy stock-flow consistent...
With very low unemployment, a large and stable current account surplus, low government debt and a bu...
Deregulation and globalization since the early 1990s caused a boom in the current global financial c...
Deregulation and globalization since the early 1990s caused a boom in the current global financial c...
Deregulation and globalization since the early 1990s caused a boom in the current global financial c...
In the Netherlands firms' savings, i.e. retained profits, exceed investment at a national level. The...
This Selected Issues paper examines the strengthening of the external current account for the Nether...
The global financial crisis triggered a major redesign of the collective pension system in the Nethe...
This paper explores, from an investment-saving perspective, the factors underlying the persistent wi...
Revisiting attempts to connect comparative political economy and the geographies of finance, we pres...
Despite of its reduced population number and small area, the Netherlands is one of the top countries...
This study analyses the composition of the yearly changes that occurred in sectorial balance sheets ...
The aim of the paper is to investigate the qualitative aspects of factors determining current accoun...
In Chapter 6, Muysken and Meijers look at the increase in total assets of the financial sector in th...
In earlier work Meijers, Muysken (and Sleijpen) have developed an open economy stock-flow consistent...
With very low unemployment, a large and stable current account surplus, low government debt and a bu...
Deregulation and globalization since the early 1990s caused a boom in the current global financial c...
Deregulation and globalization since the early 1990s caused a boom in the current global financial c...
Deregulation and globalization since the early 1990s caused a boom in the current global financial c...
In the Netherlands firms' savings, i.e. retained profits, exceed investment at a national level. The...
This Selected Issues paper examines the strengthening of the external current account for the Nether...
The global financial crisis triggered a major redesign of the collective pension system in the Nethe...
This paper explores, from an investment-saving perspective, the factors underlying the persistent wi...
Revisiting attempts to connect comparative political economy and the geographies of finance, we pres...
Despite of its reduced population number and small area, the Netherlands is one of the top countries...
This study analyses the composition of the yearly changes that occurred in sectorial balance sheets ...
The aim of the paper is to investigate the qualitative aspects of factors determining current accoun...