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- Financial Repression, Liberalization, Crisis and Restructuring: Lessons of Korea's Financial Sector Policies
- China 2049: Economic Challenges of a Rising Global Power David Dollar, Yiping Huang, and Yang Yao
- Origins and Measurement of Financial Repression: the British Case in the Mid-20Th Century
- Debt and Inflation During a Period of Financial Repression
- Good-Bye Financial Repression, Hello Financial Crash
- Financialization and Industrial Policies in Japan and Korea
- RESEARCH in PROGRESS Financial Repression, Interest Rates, and Credit Allocation in Sub-Saharan Africa
- From the Japanese Bubble to China's Financial Time Bomb
- Financial Repression in China: Short-Term Growth but Long-Term Crisis
- Deconstructing the Mechanics and Market Implications of Financial Repression
- World Bank Document
- Did Monetary Forces Cause the Hungarian Crises of 1931?
- Columbia University Washington, DC 20431 New York, NY 10027
- Redefining Risk in the Next Phase of Financial Repression
- Financial Repression in General Equilbrium
- On the Financial Repression in Japan During the High Growth Period (1953-73) (*)
- A Generic Model of Financial Repression Rangan Gupta University of Connecticut
- CIO-Special-Financial-Repression-Still
- Tilburg University Financial Repression and High Public Debt in Europe Van
- Consumer Finance and Financial Repression in China
- Retiring in an Era of Financial Repression
- World Economy Financial Repression 1
- FINANCIAL MARKETS, PUBLIC POLICY, and the EAST ASIAN MIRACLE Public Disclosure Authorized
- China's Financial Repression: Symptoms, Consequences and Causes
- Financial Repression in China
- Financial Repression: Evidence and Theory Banks Should Be Required to Hold Government Debt at Low Interest Rates Only Under Limited Conditions