Essay Topic Hub

Financial Crisis
Essays

752+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

752 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

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.

752 papers
Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Europe\'s Challenges After WWII and the Transition Away From Communism
This paper surveys the challenges Europe faced after the end of World War II. It discusses the destructive nature of the war, the Marshall Plan, the Warsaw Pact and NATO and the Cold War. It examines what transpired after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1991, including the 'shock therapy' used to bring about a transition from command to capitalist economies in Eastern Europe.
Paper Masters
Audit Reports Involve Increased Communication.
So this is a simple question and answer review on a business article about audit reviews. Audit reviews when done well, promote confidence and trust within companies and the investors that fund. But, when done improperly, can lead to catastrophic results. Case in point KPMG's dilemma with HBO's issue with underestimating provisions, causing taxpayers to bail them out in the amount of 25 billion pounds.
Paper Doctorate
Interest Rate and Mortgage Market
In a recent article entitled In Defense of the Fed's New Interest-Rate Policy, which was published by The Wall Street Journal on January 6th, 2013, financial reporters Frederic S. Mishkin and Michael Woodford carefully craft a justification of the Federal Reserve's latest revision to its federal-funds rate target. The purpose of the article is to inform readers about the Fed's recent Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which resulted in the decision to keep the federal-funds rate near zero with a contingency based on the national unemployment and inflation rates. By linking the federal-funds rate target to a baseline of 6.5% unemployment, and a predicted rate of 2.5% inflation, while also providing public notice regarding its previously private policy criteria, the Fed is renewing its efforts to stabilize an economy battered by a prolonged recession. As Mishkin and Woodford state in the article, this "commitment not to raise rates in the future as soon as might have been expected is an obvious way the FOMC can loosen current financial conditions" (2013), because when borrowers are secure in the knowledge that their interest rates will remain steady the flow of investment capital improves dramatically.
Paper Doctorate
Management behavior and economics during the global financial crisis
To elaborate on this particular matter, Berrone (2008) studied the incentive system which was allotted to top executives of financial institutions. He found that not only are these employees allowed to attain a higher level of risk through the kind of stock options they had, but they are even being rewarded for any mistakes or blunders they make through the exit package that they can avail. It is as if the options which have been given to employees are wrong. Below executives, directors and even managers are given bonuses and rewards on lending out mortgages. This resembles the sale bonus that is given to salesmen who does well. The only thing that these employees saw through all those loans and mortgages and stocks was their own benefit. Due to this reason, they went all in without considering what would happen if things went wrong.
Essay Doctorate
Canadian Current Events Magazine Produced by Name
Hi, I hope you're well. Attached find a copy of what I have so far. I left blank the areas where the articles can be copy and pasted. Is this what you were looking for? Also, what do you mean by economic scorecard. If you could send me a sample, I'll work on preparing one for you. Thanks.
Paper Undergraduate
Law of international banking
Hello, I hope you are well. Please find a 15 page paper attached. It explores question 1 based on your guidelines. It provides an introduction to the function of banks, the differences between deposit-oriented banks and investment banks and then explores the existing regulation in the UK and how regulation alters behavior in regards to moral hazard. I hope it satisfies your needs. Thanks.
Paper Undergraduate
Policy analysis and implementation frameworks
This is a paper about the development and evaluation of a plan to either ease or eradicate Seattle's homelessness problem. The first step is to describe what the problem is, develop it, analyze it, evaluate it, and then suggest recommendations for further iimprovement. All of these elements are featured in the plan that is given in this write up.
Paper Masters
Leadership Failures and Motivation Strategies to Increase Productivity and Performance
This report has all the elements of the formal report and it presents a particular problem to the readers of the report. The introdcution spells out the issue that has happened within the company, and why it is of a critical nature. The discussion section outlines the issue. the conclusion outlines the problem and the recommendations chooses from solutions to off the most equitable solution.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Reality based budgeting approaches and practices
The "Great Recession" that has crippled local economies throughout America has exposed the traditional budgeting procedures used by legislators and municipal leaders as a fallacious exercise in stopgap financing that…
Research Paper Doctorate
Inside Job: documentary analysis and financial crisis examination
The financial crisis of 2008 was driven by a lack of ethics on the aprt of CEOs of fianncial services firms, many of which emerged form the crisis with larger personal fortunes than before. This was directly attributable to the many ways these businesses and their founders bent the rules of ethics, and completely lacked accountability over their overall performance.