Anjali Karol | Institute For Financial Management and Research (original) (raw)

Anjali Karol is a fourth-year PhD scholar in the area of financial economics at the Institute for Financial Management and Research. She obtained her BA in Economics from Kerala University and MA in Applied Economics from Pondicherry Central University. Her current research is focused on international financial contagion in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis. Her other research interests include environmental economics and the economics of education.

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Papers by Anjali Karol

Research paper thumbnail of A Decade After the Global Financial Crisis: Lessons and Policy for International Stability

International Journal of Financial Research, Mar 16, 2020

The Global Financial Crisis of 2007-09 has been the most severe global shock after the Great Depr... more The Global Financial Crisis of 2007-09 has been the most severe global shock after the Great Depression of the 1930s. A crisis of this order has changed the outlook on international socioeconomic integration and concerns on financial security and global polity. As we are a decade after the crisis, it is instinctively imperative to relook and analyse the lessons learnt and the policy responses that helped ease the crisis. This paper is an attempt in that direction. Research over the years suggests that global financial system has evolved into a more innocuous network at limited unintended costs. Globally policy regulations have tightened to lessen the impact of future crises and today most countries have some form of macro-prudential surveillance.

Research paper thumbnail of Differing investor perspectives: Revisiting contagion under perspective correlations

Journal of Public Affairs

Research paper thumbnail of A Decade After the Global Financial Crisis: Lessons and Policy for International Stability

International Journal of Financial Research, Mar 16, 2020

The Global Financial Crisis of 2007-09 has been the most severe global shock after the Great Depr... more The Global Financial Crisis of 2007-09 has been the most severe global shock after the Great Depression of the 1930s. A crisis of this order has changed the outlook on international socioeconomic integration and concerns on financial security and global polity. As we are a decade after the crisis, it is instinctively imperative to relook and analyse the lessons learnt and the policy responses that helped ease the crisis. This paper is an attempt in that direction. Research over the years suggests that global financial system has evolved into a more innocuous network at limited unintended costs. Globally policy regulations have tightened to lessen the impact of future crises and today most countries have some form of macro-prudential surveillance.

Research paper thumbnail of Differing investor perspectives: Revisiting contagion under perspective correlations

Journal of Public Affairs

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