Political Economy of Bank Regulation in Developing Countries
Risk and Reputation
Herausgeber: Jones, Emily
Political Economy of Bank Regulation in Developing Countries
Risk and Reputation
Herausgeber: Jones, Emily
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Drawing on in-depth analysis of eleven countries across Africa, Asia ,and Latin America this book shows how financial globalisation is changing politics of regulation in developing countries.
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Drawing on in-depth analysis of eleven countries across Africa, Asia ,and Latin America this book shows how financial globalisation is changing politics of regulation in developing countries.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 406
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Mai 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 242mm x 163mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 821g
- ISBN-13: 9780198841999
- ISBN-10: 019884199X
- Artikelnr.: 62666756
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 406
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Mai 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 242mm x 163mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 821g
- ISBN-13: 9780198841999
- ISBN-10: 019884199X
- Artikelnr.: 62666756
Emily Jones is an Associate Professor at the Blavatnik School of Government where she directs the Global Economic Governance Programme which fosters research and debate on how to make the global economy inclusive and sustainable. She is also a Fellow of University College. Emily's research examines the political economy of global trade and finance, focusing on the ways in which governments can exert influence in asymmetric negotiations. Emily teaches courses on international political economy and negotiation strategy and skills for public policy, specialising in international trade. She holds a DPhil in International Political Economy from the University of Oxford, and an MSc (distinction) in Development Economics from the School of African and Oriental Studies, University of London, and a first-class BA in Philosophy, Politics and Economics from the University of Oxford.
* Part I: Introduction, cross-country variation, and analytical
argument
* 1: Emily Jones: The puzzle: peripheral developing countries
implementing international banking standards
* 2: Emily Jones: The challenges international banking standards pose
for peripheral developing countries
* 3: Emily Jones: The politics of regulatory convergence and divergence
* Part II: Case studies
* 4: Natalya Naqvi: Pakistan: Politicians, regulations, and banks
advocate Basel
* 5: Pritish Behuria: Rwanda: Running without legs
* 6: Emily Jones: Ghana: Reformist politicians drive Basel
implementation
* 7: Ousseni Illy and Seydou Ouedraogo: West African Economic and
Monetary Union: Central bankers drive Basel under IMF pressure
* 8: Hazel Gray: Tanzania: From institutional hiatus to the return of
policy-based lending
* 9: Radha Upadhyaya: Kenya: 'Dubai' in the Savannah
* 10: Peter Knaack: Bolivia: Pulling in two directions - the
developmental state and Basel standards
* 11: Florence Dafe: Nigeria: Catch 22 - navigating Basel standards in
Nigeria's fragile banking sector
* 12: Rebecca Engebretsen and Ricardo Soares de Oliveira: Angola: "For
the English to see"
* 13: Que-Giang Tran-Thi and Tu-Anh Vu Thanh: Vietnam: The dilemma of
bringing global financial standards to a socialist market economy
* 14: Toni Weis: Ethiopia: Raising a vegetarian tiger?
* Part III: Conclusion
* 15: Emily Jones: Conclusion: Key findings and policy recommendations
argument
* 1: Emily Jones: The puzzle: peripheral developing countries
implementing international banking standards
* 2: Emily Jones: The challenges international banking standards pose
for peripheral developing countries
* 3: Emily Jones: The politics of regulatory convergence and divergence
* Part II: Case studies
* 4: Natalya Naqvi: Pakistan: Politicians, regulations, and banks
advocate Basel
* 5: Pritish Behuria: Rwanda: Running without legs
* 6: Emily Jones: Ghana: Reformist politicians drive Basel
implementation
* 7: Ousseni Illy and Seydou Ouedraogo: West African Economic and
Monetary Union: Central bankers drive Basel under IMF pressure
* 8: Hazel Gray: Tanzania: From institutional hiatus to the return of
policy-based lending
* 9: Radha Upadhyaya: Kenya: 'Dubai' in the Savannah
* 10: Peter Knaack: Bolivia: Pulling in two directions - the
developmental state and Basel standards
* 11: Florence Dafe: Nigeria: Catch 22 - navigating Basel standards in
Nigeria's fragile banking sector
* 12: Rebecca Engebretsen and Ricardo Soares de Oliveira: Angola: "For
the English to see"
* 13: Que-Giang Tran-Thi and Tu-Anh Vu Thanh: Vietnam: The dilemma of
bringing global financial standards to a socialist market economy
* 14: Toni Weis: Ethiopia: Raising a vegetarian tiger?
* Part III: Conclusion
* 15: Emily Jones: Conclusion: Key findings and policy recommendations
* Part I: Introduction, cross-country variation, and analytical
argument
* 1: Emily Jones: The puzzle: peripheral developing countries
implementing international banking standards
* 2: Emily Jones: The challenges international banking standards pose
for peripheral developing countries
* 3: Emily Jones: The politics of regulatory convergence and divergence
* Part II: Case studies
* 4: Natalya Naqvi: Pakistan: Politicians, regulations, and banks
advocate Basel
* 5: Pritish Behuria: Rwanda: Running without legs
* 6: Emily Jones: Ghana: Reformist politicians drive Basel
implementation
* 7: Ousseni Illy and Seydou Ouedraogo: West African Economic and
Monetary Union: Central bankers drive Basel under IMF pressure
* 8: Hazel Gray: Tanzania: From institutional hiatus to the return of
policy-based lending
* 9: Radha Upadhyaya: Kenya: 'Dubai' in the Savannah
* 10: Peter Knaack: Bolivia: Pulling in two directions - the
developmental state and Basel standards
* 11: Florence Dafe: Nigeria: Catch 22 - navigating Basel standards in
Nigeria's fragile banking sector
* 12: Rebecca Engebretsen and Ricardo Soares de Oliveira: Angola: "For
the English to see"
* 13: Que-Giang Tran-Thi and Tu-Anh Vu Thanh: Vietnam: The dilemma of
bringing global financial standards to a socialist market economy
* 14: Toni Weis: Ethiopia: Raising a vegetarian tiger?
* Part III: Conclusion
* 15: Emily Jones: Conclusion: Key findings and policy recommendations
argument
* 1: Emily Jones: The puzzle: peripheral developing countries
implementing international banking standards
* 2: Emily Jones: The challenges international banking standards pose
for peripheral developing countries
* 3: Emily Jones: The politics of regulatory convergence and divergence
* Part II: Case studies
* 4: Natalya Naqvi: Pakistan: Politicians, regulations, and banks
advocate Basel
* 5: Pritish Behuria: Rwanda: Running without legs
* 6: Emily Jones: Ghana: Reformist politicians drive Basel
implementation
* 7: Ousseni Illy and Seydou Ouedraogo: West African Economic and
Monetary Union: Central bankers drive Basel under IMF pressure
* 8: Hazel Gray: Tanzania: From institutional hiatus to the return of
policy-based lending
* 9: Radha Upadhyaya: Kenya: 'Dubai' in the Savannah
* 10: Peter Knaack: Bolivia: Pulling in two directions - the
developmental state and Basel standards
* 11: Florence Dafe: Nigeria: Catch 22 - navigating Basel standards in
Nigeria's fragile banking sector
* 12: Rebecca Engebretsen and Ricardo Soares de Oliveira: Angola: "For
the English to see"
* 13: Que-Giang Tran-Thi and Tu-Anh Vu Thanh: Vietnam: The dilemma of
bringing global financial standards to a socialist market economy
* 14: Toni Weis: Ethiopia: Raising a vegetarian tiger?
* Part III: Conclusion
* 15: Emily Jones: Conclusion: Key findings and policy recommendations