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Unfinished business : the unexplored causes of the financial crisis and the lessons yet to be learned / Tamim Bayoumi.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Haven : Yale University Press, (c)2017.Description: 1 online resource (x, 286 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780300231830
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • HB3722 .U545 2017
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
US shadow banks unleashed -- Boom and bust -- A flawed monetary union -- Intellectual blinkers and unexpected spillovers -- A history of the international monetary system in five crises -- Will revamped financial regulations work? -- Making macroeconomics more relevant -- Whither EMU?
Summary: A penetrating critique tracing how under-regulated trading between European and U.S. banks led to the 2008 financial crisis--with a prescription for preventing another meltdown. There have been numerous books examining the 2008 financial crisis from either a U.S. or European perspective. Tamim Bayoumi is the first to explain how the Euro crisis and U.S. housing crash were, in fact, parasitically intertwined. Starting in the 1980s, Bayoumi outlines the cumulative policy errors that undermined the stability of both the European and U.S. financial sectors, highlighting the catalytic role played by European mega banks that exploited lax regulation to expand into the U.S. market and financed unsustainable bubbles on both continents. U.S. banks increasingly sold sub-par loans to under-regulated European and U.S. shadow banks and, when the bubbles burst, the losses whipsawed back to the core of the European banking system. A much-needed, fresh look at the origins of the crisis, Bayoumi's analysis concludes that policy makers are ignorant of what still needs to be done both to complete the cleanup and to prevent future crises.
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Includes bibliographies and index.

A penetrating critique tracing how under-regulated trading between European and U.S. banks led to the 2008 financial crisis--with a prescription for preventing another meltdown. There have been numerous books examining the 2008 financial crisis from either a U.S. or European perspective. Tamim Bayoumi is the first to explain how the Euro crisis and U.S. housing crash were, in fact, parasitically intertwined. Starting in the 1980s, Bayoumi outlines the cumulative policy errors that undermined the stability of both the European and U.S. financial sectors, highlighting the catalytic role played by European mega banks that exploited lax regulation to expand into the U.S. market and financed unsustainable bubbles on both continents. U.S. banks increasingly sold sub-par loans to under-regulated European and U.S. shadow banks and, when the bubbles burst, the losses whipsawed back to the core of the European banking system. A much-needed, fresh look at the origins of the crisis, Bayoumi's analysis concludes that policy makers are ignorant of what still needs to be done both to complete the cleanup and to prevent future crises.

European banks unfettered -- US shadow banks unleashed -- Boom and bust -- A flawed monetary union -- Intellectual blinkers and unexpected spillovers -- A history of the international monetary system in five crises -- Will revamped financial regulations work? -- Making macroeconomics more relevant -- Whither EMU?

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