Description |
1 online resource |
Series |
Surveys of Recent Research in Economics Ser |
|
Surveys of Recent Research in Economics Ser
|
Contents |
Intro; Contemporary Topics in Finance; Contents; 1 Contemporary Topics in Finance: A Collection of Literature Surveys; References; 2 A Survey of the International Evidence and Lessons Learned about Unconventional Monetary Policies: Is a 'New Normal' in our Future?; 1. Introduction; 2. The Transition to Unconventional Policies; 2.1 The 2008 GFC; 2.2 A Brief Typology of UMP; 3. The International Evidence to Date: Financial Markets; 3.1 Measurement Challenges; 3.2 Learning from Japan's Experience; 3.3 The GFC and Its Aftermath; 3.4 Is Europe Different?; 3.5 International Spillovers from UMP |
|
4. The International Evidence to Date: Macro-Economic Effects4.1 Can UMP Have Real Economic Effects?; 4.2 DSGE Alternative; 4.3 Central Bank Credibility and Inflation Expectations; 5. Conclusions: Lessons Learned, the Exit and the New Normal; Acknowledgements; Notes; References; 3 Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees: Costs, Benefits and Risks; 1. Introduction; 2. Why Do Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees Arise?; 2.1 Why Do Explicit Bank Debt Guarantees Exist?; 2.2 Differences between Explicit and Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees; 2.3 Why Do Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees Arise? |
|
3. Who Benefits from Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees?3.1 Bank Creditors; 3.2 Bank Owners; 3.3 Selected Other Stakeholders; 4. What Are the Economic Costs of Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees?; 4.1 Weakened Market Discipline; 4.2 Increased Risk-Taking; 4.3 Competitive Distortions; 4.4 Creating Perceived Contingent Liabilities for the Sovereign; 5. What Factors Influence the Value of the Perceived Guarantee?; 5.1 The Credit Strengths of the Debtor and the Guarantor; 5.2 Collective and Idiosyncratic Risk; 5.3 Estimating the Value of Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees |
|
6. How Do Markets React to What Policy Makers Say and Do about Implicit Guarantees?6.1 How Do Policy Makers Communicate about the Issue of Implicit Bank Debt Guarantees?; 6.2 How Do Financial Markets React to What Policy Makers Say and Do?; 6.3 What Has Been the Response to the Special Treatment Administered to GSIBs So Far?; 7. Concluding Remarks and Open Issues; Acknowledgements; References; 4 Financial Fraud: A Literature Review; 1. Introduction; 2. False Financial Disclosures; 2.1 Rogue Traders: False Financial Disclosures at the Proprietary Trading Desks of Financial Firms |
|
2.2 Mortgage Origination Fraud: False Financial Disclosures in the Context of Loan Applications2.3 Mortgage Securitization Fraud: False Financial Disclosures in the Context of Structured Finance Investments; 3. Financial Scams; 3.1 Investment Scams: Sham Business Ventures and Ponzi Schemes; 3.2. Financial Identity Scams: Phishing, Pharming and Payment Scams; 4. Fraudulent Financial Mis-Selling; 4.1. Predatory Lending: The Mis-Selling of Mortgage Loans; 4.2 The Mis-Selling of Life Insurance and Pension Schemes; 4.3 The Mis-Selling of Interest Rate Derivatives; 5. Conclusion; Acknowledgements |
Notes |
Includes index |
|
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on March 12, 2019) |
Subject |
Finance -- Case studies
|
|
Finance -- Bibliography.
|
|
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Finance.
|
|
Finance
|
Genre/Form |
bibliographies.
|
|
Bibliographies
|
|
Case studies
|
|
Case studies.
|
|
Bibliographies.
|
|
Études de cas.
|
|
Bibliographies.
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Claus, Iris, editor.
|
|
Krippner, Leo, editor.
|
LC no. |
2019007301 |
ISBN |
9781119565185 |
|
1119565189 |
|
9781119565192 |
|
1119565197 |
|
9781119565178 |
|
1119565170 |
|