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Regulating capital : setting standards for the international financial system

Part of the Cornell Studies in Money series
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Financial instability threatens the global economy.

The volatility of capital movements across national borders has led many observers to argue for a reformed "global financial architecture," a body of consistent rules and institutions to prevent financial crises.

Yet regulators have a decidedly mixed record in their attempts to create global standards for the financial system.

David Andrew Singer seeks to explain the varying pressures on regulatory agencies to negotiate internationally acceptable rules and suggests that the variation is largely traceable to the different domestic political pressures faced by regulators. In Regulating Capital, Singer provides both a theory of the effects of domestic pressures on international regulation and a detailed analysis of regulators' attempts at international rulemaking in banking, securities, and insurance.

Singer addresses the complexities of global finance in an accessible style, and he does not turn away from the more dramatic aspects of globalization; he makes clear the international implications of bank failures and stock-market crashes, the rise of derivatives, and the catastrophic financial losses caused by Hurricane Katrina and the events of September 11.

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Product Details
Cornell University Press
0801476712 / 9780801476716
Paperback / softback
332.042
22/07/2010
United States
English
176 p. : ill.
23 cm
Reprint. Originally published: 2007.