Central Banks as a Bank Supervisor
A Comparison of the Function of the Bank of England, the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank- Authors:
- Series:
- Wissenschaftliche Beiträge aus dem Tectum Verlag: Rechtswissenschaft, Volume 90
- Publisher:
- 2017
Summary
As a result of the Global Financial Crisis in 2007, the financial and bank supervision in many countries was reformed. Stanyo Dinov investigates the Central Banks of the three advanced financial systems – the UK, the USA and the EU – and the questions related to their supervisory role. All three banks historically and symbolically represent different legal systems, influenced by each other and comparable to one another. They all represent the model of free market economy, whose roots began with the idea of economic liberalism and wellbeing from Adam Smith. The legislators in the UK, the USA and the EU have chosen solutions that are in some ways similar though in other ways different to reform these financial systems. Therefore, on the basis of their historical development, the author presents and compares the post-crisis reforms by these three systems, with the main focus on the CBs’ role as banking supervisor. Existing problems are discussed and some alternative solutions are presented.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2017
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8288-3993-9
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-8288-6765-9
- Publisher
- Tectum, Baden-Baden
- Series
- Wissenschaftliche Beiträge aus dem Tectum Verlag: Rechtswissenschaft
- Volume
- 90
- Language
- German
- Pages
- 102
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis Partial access Pages 1 - 4 Download chapter (PDF)
- Abstract No access Pages 5 - 10
- Index of abbreviations No access Pages 11 - 16
- 1. Introduction No access Pages 17 - 18
- 2. The Central Banks and their function No access Pages 19 - 28
- 3.1. Historical background No access
- 3.2. Banking Act 1998 No access
- 3.3. The Financial Services Modernisation Act 2000 No access
- 3.4. Banking Act 2008 and 2009 No access
- 3.5. The Financial Services Act 2010 No access
- 3.6.1. The Financial Policy Committee No access
- 3.6.2. The Prudential Regulation Authority No access
- 3.6.3. The Financial Conduct Authority No access
- 3.7. Financial Services Act 2012 No access
- 3.8. The Financial Services Act 2013 No access
- 3.9. Assessment No access
- 4.1. Historical background No access
- 4.2. The US financial system and the Federal Reserve Act No access
- 4.3. Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act 1999 No access
- 4.4. Commodity Futures Modernisation Act 2000 No access
- 4.5. Emergency Economic Stabilisation Act 2008 No access
- 4.6. White Paper on Financial Regulatory Reform 2009 No access
- 4.7. Dodd-Frank Act 2010 No access
- 4.8. Assessment No access
- 5. The European Central Bank No access
- 5.1. Historical background and responsibilities No access
- 5.2.1. The Role of the European Central Bank No access
- 5.2.2. Evaluation No access
- 5.3.1. Introducing of the SSM and the Proposals of the European Commission for conferring supervision tasks on the ECB and the new EBA No access
- 5.3.2. Requirements of the European Parliament No access
- 5.3.3 Political Agreement in the European Council No access
- 5.3.4.1. Article 127(6) TFEU No access
- 5.3.4.2. Competences of the ECB, the ESRB and the EBA No access
- 5.3.4.3. Democratic Legitimacy No access
- 5.3.4.4. Scope of Supervision No access
- 5.3.2. Proposal of the European Commission for a SRM No access
- 5.3.3. Proposal for a Single Rulebook No access
- 5.6. Assessment No access
- 6. Conclusion No access Pages 89 - 92
- Cases: No access
- Acts of Parliament and Statutory Instruments: No access
- Textbooks and monographs: No access
- Journal articles: No access
- Working papers: No access





