CHINESE people like to bank their cash; this is evident in the 300 million deposit accounts currently in existence.China's national savings ratio approaches 50 percent, and 30 percent of its income is from family sav...CHINESE people like to bank their cash; this is evident in the 300 million deposit accounts currently in existence.China's national savings ratio approaches 50 percent, and 30 percent of its income is from family savings, says Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley,展开更多
The underlying literature hypothesises and provides randomised evidence for the positive impact of promoting the broad-based inclusion,empowerment,and representation of women on regional ecosystems.This study seeks to...The underlying literature hypothesises and provides randomised evidence for the positive impact of promoting the broad-based inclusion,empowerment,and representation of women on regional ecosystems.This study seeks to isolate a female agencydriven development factor in external sovereign emerging market debt and finds evidence for superior risk-adjusted returns from tilting towards female agency leaders.We propose the female agency factor as an additional scope in the modern investor’s toolbox of holistic credit assessment,allowing investors to isolate the issuers which are the most effective sovereign transmission mechanisms of sustainable development capital.This contribution to the corpus supports the notion of integrating sustainability factors into portfolio construction and reinforces the argument for supporting femaleled development from a financial markets’perspective.展开更多
文摘CHINESE people like to bank their cash; this is evident in the 300 million deposit accounts currently in existence.China's national savings ratio approaches 50 percent, and 30 percent of its income is from family savings, says Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley,
文摘The underlying literature hypothesises and provides randomised evidence for the positive impact of promoting the broad-based inclusion,empowerment,and representation of women on regional ecosystems.This study seeks to isolate a female agencydriven development factor in external sovereign emerging market debt and finds evidence for superior risk-adjusted returns from tilting towards female agency leaders.We propose the female agency factor as an additional scope in the modern investor’s toolbox of holistic credit assessment,allowing investors to isolate the issuers which are the most effective sovereign transmission mechanisms of sustainable development capital.This contribution to the corpus supports the notion of integrating sustainability factors into portfolio construction and reinforces the argument for supporting femaleled development from a financial markets’perspective.