Monetary policy and risk management in financial globalization /Georgios I. Zekos [editor.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: New York : Nova Science Publishers, Incorporated, (c)2015.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
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  • HF1379 .M664 2015
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Contents:
Subject: Globalization is a complex, forceful, legal and social process that takes place within an integrated whole with no regard for geographical boundaries. Financial globalization is criticized for consequential increases in economic volatility and disruptions to monetary policy autonomy. Globalization increases the vulnerability of economies to shock while restraining the apparatus that central banks and policy authorities have for dealing with said shocks engendered at home and abroad. Globalization and corporate governance interact to deal with governance issues arising from the globalization of.
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Includes bibliographies and index.

MONETARY POLICY AND RISKMANAGEMENT IN FINANCIALGLOBALIZATION; MONETARY POLICY AND RISKMANAGEMENT IN FINANCIALGLOBALIZATION; Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data; CONTENTS; INTRODUCTION; Chapter 1:GLOBALIZATION, FINANCE AND RISK MANAGEMENT; 1.1. GLOBALIZATION; 1.2. VARIOUS DIMENSIONS OF GLOBALIZATION; 1.3. GLOBALIZATION AS A POLITICAL STRATEGY; 1.4. GLOBALIZATION AND CYBERSPACE; 1.5. LAW IN GLOBALIZATION; 1.6. GLOBALIZATION AND FDI; 1.7. GLOBALIZATION AND GROWTH; 1.8. FINANCIAL GLOBALIZATION; 1.9. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND RISK MANAGEMENT.

Chapter 2:MONETARY POLICY AND RISK MANAGEMENT2.1. MARKETS GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL FINANCIAL MARKETS; 2.2. THE ROLE OF MONEY; 2.3. FROM THE QUANTITY EQUATION OF MONEY TO A MONETARYPOLICY RULE; 2.4. THE HIERARCHY OF MONEY, REPOS AND CDS; 2.5. COMPETITION IN CURRENCY AND INFLATION; 2.6. INFLATION AND GLOBALIZATION; 2.7. INTEREST RATES; 2.8. GLOBALIZATION'S IMPACT ON INFLATION; 2.9. CENTRAL BANKS, ASSET PRICES AND MONETARY POLICY; 2.10. SUPPLY and DEMAND FOR CREDIT; 2.11. CAPITAL FLOWS; 2.12. BANKS AND LIQUIDITY; 2.13. THREE MONETARY ERAS; 2.14. MONETARY POLICY AND FINANCIAL MARKETS.

2.15. THE ROLE OF MONEY IN MONETARY POLICY2.16. REFOCUSING MONETARY POLICY, BANKING AND FUNDS; 2.17. OPTIMAL MONETARY POLICY; 2.18. UNCONVENTIONAL MONETARY POLICY; 2.19. BANK REGULATION AND SECURITIZATION; 2.20. BASEL I, II, III REGULATIONS AND RISK MANAGEMENT; 2.21. BANK RESOLUTION AND EUROPEAN BANKING UNION; 2.22. FINANCIAL BANKING CRISIS; 2.23. FINANCIAL REGULATION AND CRISIS; 2.24. FINANCIAL GLOBALIZATION AND CRISIS MANAGEMENT; 2.25. ASSET PRICE BUBBLES AND MONETARY POLICY; 2.26. BANKING DEREGULATION; 2.27. LIQUIDITY IN FINANCIAL CRISIS; 2.28. MONETARY POLICY IN FINANCIAL CRISES.

2.29. FINANCIAL CRISIS DEVELOPMENTS2.30. RESETTING FINANCIAL GLOBALIZATION; 2.31. FOREIGN BANK BEHAVIOR IN CRISES; 2.32. MONETARY POLICY and RISK MANAGEMENT; 2.33. TAIL RISK IN ASSET MANAGEMENT; 2.34. THE EMERGENCE OF ENTERPRISE-WIDERISK MANAGEMENT; 2.35. RISK MANAGEMENT FUNCTION AND INTERNALCONTROL SYSTEMS; 2.36. RISKS IN PROVIDING BANKING SERVICES; 2.37. RISK MEASUREMENT AND VAR; 2.38. THE RISKS OF RISK MANAGEMENT; 2.39. MONETARY POLICY AND FINANCIAL STABILITY POLICY; 2.40. PROPERTY MARKETS FOR MONETARY POLICYAND FINANCIAL STABILITY; 2.41. FINANCIAL INSTABILITY AND MACROECONOMIC RISK.

2.42. COMPETITION AND STABILITY2.43. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE OF BANKSAND THE FINANCIAL CRISIS; 2.44. CORPORATE RISK MANAGEMENT and HEDGE; 2.45. IMPACT OF CORPORATE RISK MANAGEMENT ON MONETARYPOLICY; 2.46. FINANCIAL GLOBALIZATION AND MONETARY POLICY; 2.47. MORTGAGE AND MONETARY POLICY; 2.48. SOVEREIGN RISK AND THE "MACROPRUDENTIAL" POLICY; Chapter 3: MNES AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE; 3.1. DEFINITION OF MNES; 3.2. EXPANSION OF MNE AND GOVERNANCE; 3.3. MULTINATIONALS AND THE CSR AS A GOVERNANCE TOOL; 3.4. MANAGEMENT OF MNES; 3.5. THE MANAGEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL R&D.

Globalization is a complex, forceful, legal and social process that takes place within an integrated whole with no regard for geographical boundaries. Financial globalization is criticized for consequential increases in economic volatility and disruptions to monetary policy autonomy. Globalization increases the vulnerability of economies to shock while restraining the apparatus that central banks and policy authorities have for dealing with said shocks engendered at home and abroad. Globalization and corporate governance interact to deal with governance issues arising from the globalization of.

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