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The EIRIN Flow-of-funds Behavioural Model of Green Fiscal Policies and Green Sovereign Bonds

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TLDR
In this article, the authors developed the EIRIN flow-of-funds behavioural model to simulate the introduction of green fiscal policies and green sovereign bonds, and display their effects on firms' investments in the brown and green sector, on unemployment, on the credit and bonds market.
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This article is published in Ecological Economics.The article was published on 2018-02-01. It has received 138 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Green growth & Bond market.

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Climate change challenges for central banks and financial regulators

TL;DR: The academic and policy debate regarding the role of central banks and financial regulators in addressing climate-related financial risks has rapidly expanded in recent years as mentioned in this paper, where the key controversies and potential research and policy avenues for the future are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Loaning scale and government subsidy for promoting green innovation

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of game models were developed to address the effects of green loans and government subsidies on green innovation activities of enterprises, and they derived a threshold value for loaning interest rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate change, financial stability and monetary policy

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of climate change on financial stability and the financial and global warming implications of a green QE program were analyzed using a stock-flow-fund ecological macroeconomic model.
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Price connectedness between green bond and financial markets

TL;DR: In this article, price connectedness between the green bond and financial markets using a structural vector autoregressive (VAR) model that captures direct and indirect transmission of financial shocks across markets was studied.
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Time and frequency domain connectedness and spill-over among fintech, green bonds and cryptocurrencies in the age of the fourth industrial revolution.

TL;DR: The study in the age of the 4th industrial revolution examines the time and frequency domain connectedness and spill-over among Fintech, green bonds, and cryptocurrencies to suggest that the total connectedness of 21st century technology assets and traditional common stocks is very high, and hence in the turbulent economy, there is a high probability of contemporaneous losses.
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Posted Content

An agent-based stock-flow consistent model of the sustainable transition in the energy sector

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated how to foster a sustainability transition of the energy system towards an economically and ecologically sustainable growth path by using an enriched version of the Eurace model, where electricity is demanded by domestic producers and is supplied by a fossil-fuel based power producer as well as a renewable-energy based one.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumption and Welfare: Two Views of Value Added

TL;DR: A reconsideration of the meaning of consumption is offered by Boulding as mentioned in this paper, who argues that if one term of a product will stop growing if only the other term grows faster, is not very reasurring if it is the product of the two terms that is limited.
Posted Content

Let’s talk about the weather: the impact of climate change on central banks

TL;DR: The authors examines the channels via which climate change and policies to mitigate it could affect a central bank's ability to meet its monetary and financial stability objectives, and argues that two types of risks are particularly relevant for central banks.
BookDOI

How capital-based instruments facilitate the transition toward a low-carbon economy : a tradeoff between optimality and acceptability

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the temporal profile of efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions induced by two mitigation strategies: a regulation of all emissions with a carbon price and an emissions embedded in new capital only, using capital-based instruments such as investment regulation, differentiation of capital costs, or a carbon tax with temporary subsidies on brown capital.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Minskyan system, Part III: System dynamics modeling of a stock flow-consistent Minskyan model

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a model that is post-Keynesian in nature and puts a large emphasis on the role of conventions and the importance of the financial side.
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