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Incomplete crisis responses: socio-economic costs and policy implications

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Article

Torres, Raymond

International Labour Review

2010

149

2

June

227-237

economic recession ; employment ; fiscal policy ; income distribution ; international ; wages ; financial system

Business economics

English

"This article examines the perverse effects of incomplete crisis responses. Initial emphasis on the role of government – through coordinated fiscal measures to stimulate the economy, cushion job losses and support vulnerable groups – was effective in averting another Great Depression, despite widening public deficits. However, a policy mistake was made by bailing out banks without reforming the dysfunctional financial system that triggered the crisis: concern over the financial markets' reaction to growing public indebtedness has shifted policy towards a more traditional, market-oriented approach focusing on fiscal consolidation, smaller government and weak social protection. The risks are greater inequities and economic instability."

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