Off balance sheet risk and Rentier state: Difference between pages

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1. ''Liquidity and funding risk in banks.''
Rentier state is a term coined by Hossein Mahdavy in 1970. This theory defines rentier states as those countries that receive on a regular basis substantial proportions of their total national revenue from the rental of indigenous resources to external clients.  


Off balance sheet sources of liquidity risks for banks include items which might cause demands for additional funding in the future. These include:
An example of this type of rental is the payment for passage of ships through the Suez Canal.
*Contingent liabilities such as guarantees.
*Undrawn lending facilities.
*Derivative instruments.
*Securitisation special purpose vehicles.


The term 'rentier state' can also be applied more broadly to states which receive income from dealing in valuable natural resources such as oil, or financial instruments such as reserve currency or strategic resources such as military bases.


2.


Any risks to an organisation arising from events, contingencies or relationships not recorded in the organisation's balance sheet.
The more general term 'rentier' originally referred to an individual living on income from property or from other investments.




== See also ==
 
* [[Balance sheet]]
==See also==
* [[Contingent liabilities]]
*[[World Bank]]
* [[Derivative instrument]]
 
* [[Entity]]
[[Category:Corporate_financial_management]]
* [[FRS  102]]
* [[IFRS 16]]
* [[Liquidity risk]]
* [[Off balance sheet]]
* [[Off balance sheet finance]]
* [[Required Stable Funding]]
* [[Securitisation special purpose vehicle]]

Revision as of 15:18, 28 March 2016

Rentier state is a term coined by Hossein Mahdavy in 1970. This theory defines rentier states as those countries that receive on a regular basis substantial proportions of their total national revenue from the rental of indigenous resources to external clients.

An example of this type of rental is the payment for passage of ships through the Suez Canal.

The term 'rentier state' can also be applied more broadly to states which receive income from dealing in valuable natural resources such as oil, or financial instruments such as reserve currency or strategic resources such as military bases.


The more general term 'rentier' originally referred to an individual living on income from property or from other investments.


See also