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Best Practices / Guidelines


  • 8-November-2023

    English

    OECD Recommendation on Building Financial Resilience to Disaster Risks

    Adopted by the OECD Council on 23 February 2017, this Recommendation provides high-level policy guidance for designing a strategy for addressing the financial impacts of disasters on individuals, businesses and sub-national levels of governments, as well as the implication for public finances.

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  • 25-October-2017

    English, PDF, 898kb

    OECD/INFE Policy Framework for Investor Education

    This paper suggests a policy framework for investor education, focusing on investor education as a component of increasing awareness of financial institutions and markets, encouraging participation and fruitful investment strategies, and ensuring financial well-being for individuals and their families.

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  • 16-November-2015

    English, PDF, 330kb

    G20/OECD High-level Principles on SME Financing

    SMEs are important engines of innovation, growth, job creation and social cohesion. However, they can only reach their full potential if they obtain the finance necessary to start, sustain and grow their business. These voluntary principles provide broad guidelines on how to enhance access by SMEs to finance to help increase the contribution of SMEs to resilient and inclusive growth.

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  • 11-June-2012

    English, Excel, 92kb

    OECD Roadmap for the good design of defined contribution pension plans

    This roadmap identifies elements of good design and public policy to assist countries to strengthen retirement income adequacy in an environment where pension benefits result from assets accumulated during working life. This roadmap was approved and endorsed by the OECD Working Party on Private Pensions in June 2012.

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  • 27-March-2012

    English, Excel, 655kb

    Detailed guide to evaluating financial education programmes English

    Detailed guide to evaluating financial education programmes English

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  • 6-December-2011

    English, , 228kb

    OECD/IOPS Good Practices on Pension Funds’ Use of Alternative Investments and Derivatives

    The Good Practices reflect what pension regulatory and supervisory authorities usually expect to examine when assessing the risk management of pension funds that use alternative investments and derivatives. The Good Practices outline how supervisors should oversee such investments and suggest possible regulatory controls. The character of the Good Practices emphasizes the overriding principle that it is the responsibility of pension

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  • 15-October-2011

    English, , 815kb

    OECD INFE Measuring Financial Literacy: Questionnaire and Guidance Notes for Conducting an Internationally Comparable Survey of Financial Literacy

    This new document, developed by the OECD International Network on Financial Education (INFE), provides national authorities and other interested bodies with a core questionnaire that can be used to survey levels of financial literacy and detailed guidance on how to implement such a survey.

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  • 11-January-2011

    English, , 243kb

    OECD/IOPS Good Practices for Pension Funds’ Risk Management Systems

    The OECD/IOPS Good Practices for Pension Funds’ Risk Management Systems aim to outline the main features of risk management systems which pension funds employ. They cover the role of management in the risk management process, look in more detail at investment risk, funding risk and operational risk (including outsourcing) control, and the risk management mechanisms which might be in place (including monitoring and reporting). The

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  • 17-December-2010

    English

    IOPS Toolkit for Risk-based Pensions Supervision

    This Toolkit assists pension supervisors to identify potential risks faced by pension plans or funds and assess the financial and operational factors in place to minimise and mitigate those risks.

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  • 30-November-2010

    English, Excel, 2,362kb

    Exit Strategies - Competition Policy Roundtable - OECD

    During the financial crisis many governments aided both the financial and non-financial sectors in their countries on an unprecedented scale. These emergency measures have in some cases taken precedence over competition rules. In particular the fact that governments helped some banks but not others has weakened competition in some markets, with “too big to fail” institutions commanding a higher market share than previously. This has

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