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Why Are There So Many Banking Crises?
1997 Asian financial crisis
A01=Jean-Charles Rochet
Asset
Author_Jean-Charles Rochet
Bad bank
Bank
Bank Capital
Bank Examination
Bank failure
Bank regulation
Bank run
Bond (finance)
Capital adequacy ratio
Capital requirement
Category=KCX
Category=KFF
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Category=KNS
Central bank
Commercial bank
Coordination failure (economics)
Credit (finance)
Credit rationing
Credit risk
Creditor
Currency crisis
Debt
Debt Issue
Debt overhang
Debt restructuring
Default (finance)
Deposit account
Deposit insurance
Economic bubble
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eq_business-finance-law
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External debt
Fedwire
Financial crisis
Financial institution
Financial transaction
Fractional-reserve banking
Government debt
Insolvency
Interbank
Interbank lending market
Interest rate risk
Investment
Investor
Journal of Banking and Finance
Leverage (finance)
Liability (financial accounting)
Line of credit
Liquidity crisis
Liquidity risk
Macroeconomics
Macroprudential regulation
Margin (finance)
Mark-to-market accounting
Market discipline
Market liquidity
Monetary authority
Monetary Control Act
Monetary policy
Money market
Moral hazard
Overdraft
Payment
Payment system
Real versus nominal value (economics)
Savings and loan crisis
Senior debt
Solvency
Stock market crash
Subordinated debt
Supervisor
Systemic risk
United States Treasury security
Product details
- ISBN 9780691131467
- Weight: 567g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 23 Jan 2008
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Almost every country in the world has sophisticated systems to prevent banking crises. Yet such crises--and the massive financial and social damage they can cause--remain common throughout the world. Does deposit insurance encourage depositors and bankers to take excessive risks? Are banking regulations poorly designed? Or are banking regulators incompetent? Jean-Charles Rochet, one of the world's leading authorities on banking regulation, argues that the answer in each case is "no." In Why Are There So Many Banking Crises?, he makes the case that, although many banking crises are precipitated by financial deregulation and globalization, political interference often causes--and almost always exacerbates--banking crises. If, for example, political authorities are allowed to pressure banking regulators into bailing out banks that should be allowed to fail, then regulation will lack credibility and market discipline won't work. Only by insuring the independence of banking regulators, Rochet says, can market forces work and banking crises be prevented and minimized.
In this important collection of essays, Rochet examines the causes of banking crises around the world in recent decades, focusing on the lender of last resort; prudential regulation and the management of risk; and solvency regulations. His proposals for reforms that could limit the frequency and severity of banking crises should interest a wide range of academic economists and those working for central and private banks and financial services authorities.
Jean-Charles Rochet is professor of mathematics and economics at the University of Toulouse and a visiting professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His books include (with Xavier Freixas) "Microeconomics of Banking" and (with Guillaume Plantin) "When Insurers Go Bust" (Princeton).
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