Emerging Risk in International Banking (RLE Banking & Finance)

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A01=P Snowden
Author_P Snowden
BIS Annual Report
Category=KC
Category=KF
Competitive Loan Market
Current Account Balances
Developed Country Borrowers
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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eq_non-fiction
Eurocurrency Market
Federal Reserve
global financial regulation
IMF Financing
IMF Involvement
IMF Projection
IMF Quota
increases
Inter-bank Loans
Inter-bank Market
interbank lending analysis
Interbank Market
interest
international banking crisis history
Ivory Coast
Latin American finance
lending
maturity
maturity transformation
Non-oil LDCs
OECD Nation
oil
price
rate
real
Real Effective Exchange Rate
Real GNP
Real Resource Costs
sovereign
sovereign debt crisis
Sovereign Lending
Total Rescheduling
transformation
UK Good
Voluntary Foreign Credit Restraint Program
West Germany
wholesale banking risks

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415529426
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 May 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Global payments imbalances and the rise of emerging economies provide the background to this analysis of risk exposure and near-insolvency at the world’s major banks. Emerging Risk was published in 1985, three years after the first international banking crisis of the post-War era, but prior to resolution after 1989 of the underlying sovereign debt overhang. With episodes of international financial instability punctuating the following quarter century until the Lehman collapse of 2008, this re-issue will contribute to the historical perspective on modern diagnoses of policy weakness and financial sector excess that is clearly needed. Whereas OPEC price increases in the 1970s were a source of the earlier global imbalances, Chinese surpluses and those occasioned by her rapid growth among commodity and oil producing countries are today’s equivalents. Emerging Risk documents the earlier poor employment of surplus funds ‘recycled’ to Latin America, much as the failure of the USA and others to use Asian financing productively is now evident. The role of the main global banking institutions in each of these outcomes reveals common threads. As a reading of Emerging Risk will confirm, both the special consequences of free competition in a global banking market, and the perverse incentives inherent in the remuneration of loan officers, were clearly present in the mid-1980s. The interaction of regulation and the competitive response of banks to produce increased reliance on wholesale borrowing and lending, together with enhanced gearing, have clear echoes in modern debates over the consequences of the Basel provisions.

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