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The Oxford Handbook of Banking provides an overview and analysis of state-of-the-art research in banking written by leading researchers in the field. It strikes a balance between abstract theory, empirical analysis, and practitioner and policy-related material.
List of contents
- 1: Allen Berger, Philip Molyneux, and John O.S. Wilson: Banking: An Overview
- PART I: THE THEORY OF BANKING
- 2: Franklin Allen and Elena Carletti: The Roles of Banks in Financial Systems
- 3: Arnoud W.A. Boot and Anjan V. Thakor: The Accelerating Integration of Banks and Markets and its Implications for Regulation
- 4: Linda Allen and Anthony Saunders: Risk Management in Banking
- 5: Philip E. Strahan: Liquidity Production in Twenty-first-century Banking
- 6: Kevin J. Stiroh: Diversification in Banking
- 7: Alan D. Morrison: Universal Banking
- 8: Richard Herring and Jacopo Carmassi: The Corporate Structure of International Financial Conglomerates: Complexity and its Implications for Safety and Soundness
- PART II: REGULATORY AND POLICY PERSPECTIVES
- 9: Michel Aglietta and BenoÃt Mojon: Central Banking
- 10: Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren: The Role of Banks in the Transmission of Monetary Policy
- 11: Xavier Freixas and Bruno M. Parigi: Lender of Last Resort and Bank Closure Policy
- 12: Edward J. Kane: Regulation and Supervision: An Ethical Perspective
- 13: Robert A. Eisenbeis and George G. Kaufman: Deposit Insurance
- 14: Michael B. Gordy and Erik A. Heitfield: Risk-based Regulatory Capital and Basel II
- 15: Mark J. Flannery: Market Discipline in Bank Supervision
- 16: Astrid A. Dick and Timothy H. Hannan: Competition and Antitrust Policy in Banking
- 17: James R. Barth, Juan A. Marchetti, Daniel E. Nolle, and Wanvimol Sawangngoenyuang: World Trade Organization Commitments vs. Reported Practices on Foreign Bank Entry and Regulation: A Cross-country Analysis
- PART III: BANK PERFORMANCE
- 18: Joseph P. Hughes and Loretta J. Mester: Efficiency In Banking: Theory, Practice, and Evidence
- 19: W. Scott Frame and Lawrence J. White: Technological Change, Financial Innovation, and Diffusion in Banking
- 20: Claudia M. Buch and Gayle L. DeLong: Banking Globalization: International Consolidation and Mergers in Banking
- 21: Allen N. Berger: Small Business Lending
- 22: Thomas A. Durkin and Gregory Elliehausen: Consumer Lending
- 23: Andreas Lehnert: Residential Mortgages
- 24: David Marques Ibanez and Martin Scheicher: Securitization: Instruments and Implications
- PART IV: MACROECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES IN BANKING
- 25: Olivier de Bandt, Philipp Hartmann, and JosÃ(c) Luis Peydró: Systemic Risk in Banking: An Update
- 26: Gerard Caprio and Patrick Honohan: Banking Crises
- 27: Charles W. Calomiris: The Great Depression and other 'Contagious' Events
- 28: David Humphrey and James McAndrews: Payments Systems
- 29: Asli Demirgÿç-Kunt: Finance and Economic Development: The Role of Government
- 30: Nicola Cetorelli: Banking and Real Economic Activity
- PART V: INTERNATIONAL DIFFERENCES IN BANKING STRUCTURES AND ENVIRONMENTS
- 31: Robert DeYoung: Banking in the United States
- 32: John Goddard, Philip Molyneux, and John O.S. Wilson: Banking in the European Union
- 33: John P. Bonin, Iftekhar Hasan, and Paul Watchel: Banking in Transition Countries
- 34: Fernando J. Cardim de Carvalho, and Luiz Fernando de Paula, and Jonathan Williams: Banking in Latin America
- 35: Hirofumi Uchida and Gregory Udell: Banking in Japan
- 36: Leora Klapper, Maria Soledad Martinez-Peria, and Bilal Zia: Banking in the Developing Nations of Asia: An Overview of Recent Changes in Ownership Structure
About the author
Allen N. Berger was Senior Economist from 1989 to 2008 and Economist from 1982-1989 at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. He has published more than 100 articles, including papers in the Journal of Political Economy, American Economic Review, Journal of Monetary Economics, Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Economics, and Review of Financial Studies. He received a PhD in Economics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1983, and a BA in Economics from Northwestern University in 1976.
Philip Molyneux's research interests include competition, risk and performance in European banking, and developments in global wealth management. In 2001 he was the Visiting Bertill Daniellson Research Fellow at the Stockholm School of Economics and University of Gothenburg. Between 2002 and 2005 he acted as a member of the ECON Financial Services expert panel for the European Parliament. He has held visiting Professorships at Bocconi University, Erasmus University, and Bolzano Free University (Italy).
John O.S. Wilson's research interests focus on the areas of European Banking, UK and US Credit Unions, and Financial Exclusion. He has been involved in work that examines the profitability and growth of European banks; competition, risk, and performance in European banking; growth, development, diversification, technology adoption, mergers, and performance of credit unions, and their role in tackling financial exclusion.