Spill-over effect, spillover effect and carry-over effect (also used in German, but with different meanings)

In the financial sector, the effect of the image (image: meant here as the idea that a person or a majority of people have about an object) of a bank – for example: Credit Suisse; Deutsche Bank – on a certain other conceptual content – here: Switzerland; Germany – and vice versa. This spillover effect (participation effect) can also be negative. The German Ergo insurance company can be mentioned as an example. For years, it rewarded “high-performing employees” with visits to brothels. In this case, the customer reckons that part of his premium flows into the red-light milieu (world of pimps and prostitutes) and avoids the provider. This is also known as the cannibalism effect. – The effect of a sales policy measure – e.g., advertising for fixed-term deposits: The effect of the economic policy of an individual country in general and of its budgetary policy in particular on the other members of a monetary association such as the euro zone. – In the EU, the fact that the communitarization of certain areas – for example: free movement of capital – by itself releases strong forces to transfer adjacent policy areas to the community, here: common monetary policy and central bank. – See badwill, Cassis de Dijon judgment, externality, gnomes of Zurich, Helvetophobia, Metcalfe rule, reputational risk. – Cf. Deutsche Bundesbank Monthly Report of July 2010, pp. 32 f. (spillover effects of fiscal policy in the EU).

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University Professor Dr. Gerhard Merk, Dipl.rer.pol., Dipl.rer.oec.
Professor Dr. Eckehard Krah, Dipl.rer.pol.
E-mail address: info@ekrah.com
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerhard_Ernst_Merk
https://www.jung-stilling-gesellschaft.de/merk/
https://www.gerhardmerk.de/

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