Banking Systems in the Crisis

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Anglo-Saxon financial systems
APRA
Australian Financial System
banking
banking system
Basel II
Basel II Capital Accord
Basel Ii Framework
Canada's Financial Sector
Canada's Financial System
Canada’s Financial Sector
Canada’s Financial System
Canadian Banks
Canadian Financial
capitalism
Category=KCX
Category=KFFK
CCB
comparative political economy
Corporate Cowboys
credit crisis
credit crunch
crisis resilience banking
cross-country banking crisis comparison
economic liberalisation
economic liberalisation effects
economic liberalization
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
EU Competition Policy
Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve System
financial crisis
Financial Market Liberalization
financial regulation
financial system
financialisation
financialization
Institutional Complementarities
liberalism
Macro Institutional Change
neo-liberalism
neoliberal policy analysis
neoliberalism
Non-depository Financial Institutions
North American Free Trade Agreement
Porter Commission
Schedule Iii
thatcherism
Toronto Dominion Bank
UK Financial
UK Financial Sector
UK Financial Service Authority

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415517898
  • Weight: 740g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Aug 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The 2008 financial crisis has severely shaken confidence in liberal economic theory and policy. However, the sharply divergent experiences of the six Anglo-Saxon ‘liberal market economies’ (LMEs) suggest that the reality is not so simple. This book traces the evolution of liberal capitalism, from its rebirth amidst the challenges of the 1970s to its role in the genesis of the 2008 crisis – and debates the assumptions underpinning the liberal capitalist paradigm.

Close examination reveals variety within liberal capitalism. Not only was there the familiar, "hands off" libertarian approach adopted by the US, UK and Ireland, but more bounded, better regulated and apparently more stable varieties of economic liberalism also emerged, through the more pragmatic approach taken by Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

The evidence is compelling. Whereas the American, British and Irish financial systems were severely damaged by the crisis, those of Canada, Australia and New Zealand proved more robust. This volume explores the degree to which these divergent experiences were a result of better and more intensive supervision, differences in business or political culture, broader commitment to social norms, and the pace of liberalisation.

Detailed comparative case studies reveal fundamental differences in the economic and political environments in which economic liberalisation took place, in approaches to finance and in the degree to which it was seen to be an engine for growth. The book concludes that this had a major influence on the evolving economic and financial systems, and consequently, their relative resilience when confronted with the challenges of the 2008 crisis.

Suzanne J. Konzelmann is Director of the London Centre for Corporate Governance and Ethics and a Reader in Management at Birkbeck, University of London, UK.

Marc Fovargue-Davies is a Research Associate at the London Centre for Corporate Governance and Ethics at Birkbeck, University of London, UK.