Browsing by Subject "Financial crises"
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Item Dubai, debt, and dependency : the political and economic implications of the bailout of Dubai(2011-05) Frasca, Alexandra Marguerite; Henry, Clement M., 1937-; Leeds, SandyThe goal of this thesis is to identify the main political and economic implications of Dubai’s debt crisis and subsequent bailout by her wealthier and more powerful sister emirate Abu Dhabi. This paper examines the implications of the bailout of Dubai on two levels: Dubai’s relationship with Abu Dhabi and Dubai’s relationship with the international investment community. The paper first provides a brief background on Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and discusses Dubai’s key characteristics that helped give Dubai her nickname Dubai Inc. – an opportune location, the Al-Maktoum ruling family, and state-led entrepreneurship. It then discusses Dubai’s historically competitive relationship with Abu Dhabi and Dubai’s push to diversify economically away from oil. The paper outlines two key economic developments – the rise of Dubai’s real estate and tourism sectors and the creation of Dubai’s government-related enterprises (GREs), which helped finance the real estate bubble. This thesis suggests that Abu Dhabi now holds unquestionable power over Dubai and can control Dubai’s GREs and their subsidiaries such as Dubai World. This paper also argues that the international investment community will demand increased transparency and higher standards of corporate governance of Dubai’s businesses in light of the entrenched poor practices that the bailout exposed within the tiny-city state's GREs and companies.Item Joel Barna Guest Lecture(1994-02-21) Barna, JoelAudio files are EID restricted. Individuals without an EID should send an email request to apl-aaa@lib.utexas.edu.Item The use of trade credit under extreme conditions: financial distress and financial crisis(2004) Preve, Lorenzo A.; Titman, SheridanI investigate how firms use trade credit under extreme conditions when alternative sources of finance are restricted or even non-existent. My objective in this dissertation is to test the hypothesis that the use of trade credit in extreme financial situations is significantly different from its use in “more normal” situations. The cost associated with a different use of trade credit during distress is likely to increase the costs of financial distress. These costs in turn, are an important determinant of the firm's capital structure, and understanding the use and cost of trade credit under extreme situations will help to better understand the tradeoffs that firms face when making capital structure choices. I consider two different types of extreme conditions; financial distress and financial crises. The manner in which firms operate under the conditions described above provide a laboratory setting for investigating the costs they bear when trying to avoid failure by making incremental recourse to trade credit.