15 Results

Datos del Panel Financial Sector

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  • Dataset

    By Department of Research and Chief Economist (VPS/RES/RES)
    This dataset was created to support the 2012 DIA - Room for Development: Housing Markets in Latin America and the Caribbean on the following topics: housing markets, urban housing. (Related publication only available in Spanish).
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  • Dataset

    By Department of Research and Chief Economist (VPS/RES/RES)
    This dataset was created to support 2008 IPES - Outsiders? The Changing Patterns of Exclusion in Latin America and the Caribbean on the following topics: poverty reduction, labor, social exclusion.
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  • Dataset

    By Department of Research and Chief Economist (VPS/RES/RES)
    This dataset was created to support 2014 DIA - Rethinking Productive Development: Sound Policies and Institutions for Economic Transformation.
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  • Dataset

    By Innovation in Citizen Services Division (VPS/IFD/ICS)
    The Public Management Evaluation Tool (PET) evaluates five “pillars” of the public policies' management cycle that are considered important for the implementation of Management for Development Results (MfDR): (i) results-based planning, (ii) results-based budgeting, (iii) public financial management (including auditing and procurement), (iv) program and project management (including the public investment system), and (v) monitoring and evaluation of public management. These pillars are broken down into components that track the maturity of institutional systems. The components are in turn composed of indicators and minimum requirements that these systems must have in an MfDR environment. All of these measures (minimum requirements, indicators, components, and pillars) are scored on a scale from 0 to 5, where a 5 indicates an ideal institutional situation.
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  • Dataset

    By Connectivity, Markets and Finance Division (VPS/IFD/CMF)
    This broad and novel database of 52 countries over 2001–11, allowed a study that assesses the link between financial intermediation and saving. The study finds that the Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) region lags well behind other regions in terms of financial depth, as measured by gross private domestic financial assets. LAC countries also have a larger share of bank deposits and cash in the private sector portfolio, compared to non-bank assets (bonds and shares). Moreover, within the institutional investor industry, pension funds are relatively developed in the region, although they grew out of the compulsory pension systems in several countries that date back to the 1980s and 1990s. The findings also indicate that LAC countries have about 40 percent of gross private financial wealth invested abroad, but just 4 percent of gross private liabilities have that origin, which attests to region’s obstacles in tapping international markets. The countries in general present a small...
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