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Europe and the Governance of Global Finance

English · Hardback

Description

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This book charts and analyses the centrality of the European-global link in financial governance, covering the whole breadth of financial markets from banking, auditing and accounting to derivatives trading, money laundering, and tax governance.


List of contents










  • 1: Daniel Mügge: Introduction

  • 2: Eilís Ferran: Financial Supervision

  • 3: Jasper Blom: Banking

  • 4: Daniel Mügge: Securities and Derivatives Markets

  • 5: Lucia Quaglia: Insurance

  • 6: Bart Stellinga: Accounting Standards

  • 7: David Howarth and Lucia Quaglia: Hedge Funds

  • 8: Stefanie Hiss and Sebastian Nagel: Credit Rating Agencies

  • 9: Eleni Tsingou: Money Laundering

  • 10: Duncan Wigan: Offshore Financial Centres

  • 11: Andrew Baker: Macroprudential Regulation



About the author

Daniel Mügge is an Associate Professor in Political Economy at the University of Amsterdam. His research focuses on finance and its governance and the political economy of macroeconomic indicators. In the EU-funded GR:EEN project on Europe's role in the world (2011-2015) he leads the work on finance. In 2009 his dissertation was awarded the Jean Blondel prize for best European political science thesis of the year. Mügge was a visiting scholar at Harvard's Center for European Studies in 2012 and is co-editor of the Review for International Political Economy.

Summary

The European Union (EU) has emerged as a central actor in financial governance. Hardly any corner of European financial markets remains untouched by EU rules, and key regulatory competences have been shifted from national authorities to supranational ones. At the same time, the global context has become ever more important for how and to what effect the EU regulates its financial markets. On the one hand, EU policymaking is embedded in global initiatives such as the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. On the other hand, the EU now rivals the USA in its ability to shape global rules. Scholars and practitioners cannot make sense of EU rulemaking without studying its links to global financial governance, just as to understand how global initiatives evolve they have to appreciate the rise of the EU as a global regulatory force.

This book charts and analyses this centrality of the European-global link in financial governance for the first time. Its chapters, written by experts in the specific fields, cover the whole breadth of financial markets. They range from banking, auditing and accounting to derivatives trading, money laundering, and tax governance. This book offers comprehensive coverage of: how and why global and European financial governance have co-evolved over time; how global and European rules, institutions, and actors are linked today; and what this implies for future global and European financial governance. It is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the dynamics of either global or European financial regulation.

Additional text

The reader gets a full, analytically rich picture of EU and global finance. The volume's findings provide valuable insights into the future direction of the EUs place in global finance. In particular, it underlines how joint action by the EU has resulted in the erosion of the unipolar US dominance in global finance.

Product details

Authors Daniel Mugge
Assisted by Daniel Mugge (Editor), Daniel Mügge (Editor)
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.06.2014
 
EAN 9780199683963
ISBN 978-0-19-968396-3
No. of pages 240
Dimensions 165 mm x 242 mm x 20 mm
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Business > Economics

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