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Financial Crisis
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Financial crisis is a central topic in economics courses ranging from introductory macroeconomics to advanced courses in international finance and political economy. It examines how disruptions in financial systems—through collapsing asset values, bank failures, credit freezes, or sovereign debt stress—ripple across entire economies. The topic is academically compelling because it sits at the intersection of monetary policy, institutional behavior, and real-world consequences for households and governments. Several papers engage directly with the 2007–2008 crisis, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, and the fiscal crisis in peripheral Europe, while others draw on theoretical frameworks, including those associated with Susan Strange's work on crisis and capitalism.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on policy analysis, evaluating specific government interventions such as the U.S. bailout plan and TARP's effectiveness. Others adopt a comparative lens, weighing the Canadian and U.S. responses side by side or contrasting theoretical explanations of capitalist crisis. Regional case studies are common, with papers examining Hong Kong banking, peripheral European fiscal stress, and the mortgage market. Some essays take a more social angle, addressing how recession-era conditions affected ordinary American workers and how the costs of financial collapse were distributed unequally across income groups.

A strong essay on financial crisis needs a clearly scoped thesis—focusing on a specific crisis, mechanism, or policy response rather than attempting to explain all financial instability at once. Evidence drawn from government data, lending statistics, and documented policy outcomes carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating causes with consequences; establishing a clear causal argument early in the paper keeps the analysis focused and persuasive.

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Essay Doctorate
Hedge fund strategies, leverage, and manager expertise in financial markets
Financial institutions and markets have become important aspects of everyday life because of the intermediary roles they play in economic development. This article examines the similarities and differences between different categories of hedge funds as hedge fund managers follow various investment strategies. The other part explore the view that borrowing in international capital markets can generally increase a company's share price and lessen its cost of capital.
Paper Undergraduate
Financial Analysis Mcdonald\'s Like Many
McDonald's like many other companies was affected by the recent global financial crisis, and its revenue and profitability was affected. However, presently, the company has recovered in the last two years. This is very clear when you examine McDonald's from 2007 to 2011. The net income of McDonald's has steadily risen from 2007 to 2011. As shown in its financial report, (see 2011 annual report), in 2007, its net income was $2,395 millions. The following year, its net income increased to $4,313 million, this was followed by a net income of $4,551 in 2009, and then $4,946 million in 2010. In 2011, McDonald's was again on a positive trend posting a net income of $5,503 million. This steady increase in net income shows that the strategies that McDonald's applied following the global crisis were effective and it has been able to maintain if not increasing its market share.
Paper Undergraduate
Frank-Dodd One of the Issues
This paper is about the Frank Dodd Act and its effect on the manufacture and marketing of synthetic collateralized debt obligation, and the use of credit default swaps to create synthetic collateralized debt obligations. Discussion of the issue centers around the Volcker Rule and Section 941, the so-called risk retention rule.
Paper Undergraduate
Working people in American society
The Plight of the Working Person in American Short Story
Thesis Doctorate
Goldman Sachs Abacus Fraud: SEC Case and Wall Street Ethics
During the subprime housing bubble, the investment firm Goldman Sachs sold investment instruments which contained many subprime mortgages likely to fail. While pushing those assets as highly recommended, employees 'bet' (sold short) that those assets would fail. When the market collapsed, Goldman made money, but its activities were later investigated by the SEC. This paper profiles that case.
Essay Doctorate
Ethical and Legal Issues Regarding Sub-Prime Mortgage
¶ … ethical and legal issues regarding sub-prime mortgage lenders. Unfortunately, the focus has been inordinately upon the poor individuals who were exploited by accepting these predatory and exploitive loans o…
Paper Undergraduate
Financial Crisis and Predatory Lending
What really caused the financial market to crash? Was it jobs being shipped overseas, or maybe a huge increase in consumer debt? There were actually a number of causes, but subprime lending and predatory lending practices were some of the largest. This paper examines how subprime and predatory lending became so popular and overlooked right before the housing bubble burst. It then looks to examine how this eventually generated the extreme financial situation that this country has still yet to get out of.
Paper Undergraduate
Impact of the world food and financial crises on developing economies
The study will investigate the "Strategic Multidimensional Analysis of the impact of the World Food Crisis and World Financial Crisis on vulnerable economies on the developing world". The study will reveal how the world global financial crisis has translated into the world food crisis with major effect on developing countries. The effects have been the increase in the unemployment rates, increase in the hunger rate and decline in the investment opportunities in developing countries.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Future Implications of Improving Health
In the past few decades, technological progress and economic growth have led to improvements in human health, causing a rise in the average age of the population as well as population growth.
Paper Doctorate
U.S. Healthcare Hard Economic and Finance Choices
This paper is about how healthcare costs are rising and the ethics of treating people with expensive therapies that only prolong life for a short period of time. The economic answer is to follow the money, but that is not the compassionate answer. By combining the economics of the decision with compassionate response, is it possible to determine a better answer for all concerned?