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The Economics of Bank Bankruptcy Law

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This book shows that a special bank bankruptcy regime is desirable for the efficient restructuring and/or liquidation of distressed banks.

It explores in detail both the principal features of corporate bankruptcy law and the specific characteristics of banks including the importance of public confidence, negative externalities of bank failures, fragmented regulatory framework, bank opaqueness, and the related asset-substitution problem and liquidity provision.

These features distinguish banks from other corporations and are largely neglected in corporate bankruptcy law.

The authors, an assistant professor for money and finance and a research economist at the Dutch Central Bank, propose changes in both prudential regulation and reorganization policies that should allow regulators and banking authorities to better mitigate disruptions in the financial system and minimize the social costs of bank failures.

Their recommendations are complemented by a discussion of bank failures from the 2007–2009 financial crisis.

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£79.20 Save 10.00%
RRP £88.00
Product Details
3642445217 / 9783642445217
Paperback / softback
346.078
28/11/2014
Germany
158 pages, XIII, 158 p.
155 x 235 mm