The period since the Global Financial Crisis and numerous scandals have exposed some areas of serious illegal and unethical conduct within western banking systems. Despite extensive reforms it is increasingly apparent however that there is a persistent problem with the 'culture' of banking in Anglo-America. US and UK state managers made substantial efforts to reform the culture of their banking sectors. However, this book argues that they focused on an extremely narrow definition of bank culture. They did so for two reasons: firstly, because the structural pressures of financialization - which are a far more important driver of the problematic features of bank culture in Anglo-America - are harder to remedy; but secondly, state managers also used their bank culture response to tackle a legitimacy crisis facing their institutions of government. In so doing they abdicated responsibility for the real problems - of inequality and instability - associated with their respective financial systems Drawing on interviews with more than 150 individuals working in financial services as well as regulators, politicians, and lawyers, The Bank Culture Debate explains the strategies employed by state managers before then examining what has and has not changed in the culture of banking in the US and UK.
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The period since the global financial crisis has exposed some areas of serious illegal and immoral conduct within western banking systems. Drawing on interviews with more than 150 individuals working in financial services as well as regulators, politicians, and lawyers, this book explains what has and hasn't changed in bank culture.
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Part 1 1: Introduction 2: Bank Culture: Behaviour and Ethics, or Financialization? 3: Culture and Legitimacy Part 2 4: US Responses and the First Phase 5: US Responses and the Second Phase 6: UK Responses and the First Phase 7: UK Responses and the Second Phase Part 3 8: Fines as a Mechanism for Culture Change? 9: What Has Changed 10: What Has Not Changed 11: Conclusion Bibliography Index
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This is an impressively scholarly account of an underappreciated aspect of the global financial crisis: whether governments can ever adequately incentivise bank behaviour that does not pose systemic risks. Macartney is guided by his fieldwork findings to argue that even well-intentioned interventions designed to change the culture of systemically important banks are likely to falter in the face of the riches that global financial markets continue to offer. A wonderful, compelling read.
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The most sustained investigation and explanation of post-crisis banking culture Draws on over 150 original interviews with individuals working in financial services as well as regulators, politicians, and lawyers Includes a comprehensive analysis of policymakers' reports and discussions as well as bank annual reports to address bank culture since 2012
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Dr Macartney is Associate Professor in Political Economy at the University of Birmingham. He was previously a Hallsworth Fellow at the University of Manchester, and an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Nottingham. His research focuses on the politics of banking and financial markets and he is the author of two books and numerous journal articles on these topics. His work has been published in internationally-renowned journals such as Review of International Political Economy, West European Politics, and Review of International Studies.
Les mer
The most sustained investigation and explanation of post-crisis banking culture Draws on over 150 original interviews with individuals working in financial services as well as regulators, politicians, and lawyers Includes a comprehensive analysis of policymakers' reports and discussions as well as bank annual reports to address bank culture since 2012
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198843764
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
620 gr
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
162 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
302

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Dr Macartney is Associate Professor in Political Economy at the University of Birmingham. He was previously a Hallsworth Fellow at the University of Manchester, and an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Nottingham. His research focuses on the politics of banking and financial markets and he is the author of two books and numerous journal articles on these topics. His work has been published in internationally-renowned journals such as Review of International Political Economy, West European Politics, and Review of International Studies.