The Oxford Handbook of Banking Edited by Allen N. Berger
Publication details: UK Oxford University Press 2015Edition: Second EditionDescription: xxi, 1051 pages; Illustrations: 26 cmISBN:- 9780198802891
- 332 BER
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reference | Indian Institute of Management Visakhapatnam General Stacks | Non-fiction | 332 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 001186 |
1: Banking: An Overview, Allen N. Berger, Phil Molyneux and John O.S. Wilson
PART I: BANKING IN A POST CRISIS WORLD
2: The Roles of Banks in Financial Systems, Franklin Allen, Elena Carletti, and Xian Gu
3: Commercial Banking and Shadow Banking: The Accelerating Integration of Banks and Markets and its Implications for Regulation, Arnoud Boot and Anjan Thakor
4: Complexity and Systemic Risk: What's Changed After the Crisis?, Richard Herring and Jacopo Carmassi
5: Universal Banking, Alan Morrison
6: Corporate Governance in Banking, Jens Hagendorff
7: Risk Management in Banking, Linda Allen and Anthony Saunders
8: Liquidity: How Banks Create it and How it should be Regulated, Christa Bouwman
9: Diversification in Banking, Kevin J. Stiroh
The Oxford Handbook of Banking, Second Edition provides an overview and analysis of developments and research in banking written by leading researchers in the field. This handbook will appeal to graduate students of economics, banking and finance, academics, practitioners, regulators, and policy makers. Consequently, the book strikes a balance between abstract theory, empirical analysis, and practitioner, and policy-related material.
The Handbook is split into five parts. Part I, The Theory of Banking, examines the role of banks in the wider financial system, why banks exist, how they function, and their corporate governance and risk management practices. Part II deals with Bank Operations and Performance. A range of issues are covered including bank performance, financial innovation, and technological change. Aspects relating to small business, consumer, and mortgage lending are analysed together with securitization, shadow banking, and payment systems. Part III entitled Regulatory and Policy Perspectives discusses central banking, monetary policy transmission, market discipline, and prudential regulation and supervision. Part IV of the book covers various Macroeconomic Perspectives in Banking.
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