Financial / Capital Market

Crash and Beyond Causes and Consequences of the Global Financial Crisis

By Andrew Farlow
Oxford University Press April 2013

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780199578016
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
April 2013
Format
Hardback , 448 pages
Jurisdiction
International ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

  • Authoritative, accessible and comprehensive analysis of the origins of the global financial crash and the management of its consequences. Covers developments in the global economy, housing markets and financial institutions before the crash. Describes the main crash events and explains the key amplification mechanisms
  • Explores the economic logic and limitations of the bank rescue and evaluates to what extent it worked. Devotes half of its coverage to a critical and hard-hitting analysis of policy after the crash
  • Examines the use of monetary and fiscal stimulus to revive economies, efforts to cure unemployment, measures to tackle housing market meltdown, austerity and the battles over long-term sovereign debt
  • Dedicated chapters on the Eurozone crash and on potential future global economic instabilities

In 2007-2008 the world was plunged into a financial and economic crash. This book explores the multiple entwined roots of the crash, including the build-up of global economic imbalances, the explosion in the use of novel financial instruments, the mismanagement of risk, and the specific roles played by housing and debt. It reviews the evidence that on the eve of the crash all was not well and that many political and finance industry leaders ignored the dangers.

The book details the key events of the crash, and explains the main amplification mechanisms. Instead of a blow-by-blow account of the numerous bank rescue programs, it uses an economics lens to dissect the logic of each category of rescue measure to make them more digestible for the lay reader. It pays particular attention to the hidden ways in which rescue measures worked and their longer-term consequences, and investigates why some approaches were favoured over others, who will ultimately bear the costs, what political constraints shaped outcomes, and to what degree new risks were created and problems only delayed.

Half the book is devoted to the numerous policy struggles after the crash. It evaluates fiscal and monetary policy measures used to rescue economies, efforts to tackle unemployment, proposals for dealing with collapsing housing markets, the widespread application of austerity and the battles over long-term sovereign debt. A chapter is devoted to the handling of the Eurozone crash and policymakers struggles to fix it, and another to the continuing risks of global economic instabilities, some old and some newly-created. It reviews reforms of mortgage markets, monetary policy and banking designed to make such disasters less likely in the future. Written before, during, and in the years immediately after the crash, the book is a lively chronicle and engaging analysis of the events and thinking of these years and of the economic and political constraints that shaped responses.

The book's arguments take on added authority given that the author had identified, and called attention to, key features of the crash before it happened. It is a very timely analysis of how policymakers arrived where they are now and of the many hurdles that still lie ahead. It provides a scholarly yet highly accessible account that will appeal to a wide audience and contribute to the public debate about the lessons to be learnt and future policy options.

Readership: Academics, researchers, finance professionals, students, policymakers, and general readers interested in understanding more about the crash. Central bankers, investment bankers, hedge fund operators, financial regulators, and real estate professionals will also find the issues highly relevant.

Table of Contents

Preface
PART ONE: BEFORE THE CRASH
1: Global Imbalances and the Rise of Debt
2: Housing and Mortgage Market Excesses
3: Innovation and Excess in Banking
PART TWO: THE CRASH AND THE BANK RESCUE
4: The Crash
5: Rescuing the Gods
6: Healing the Sick and Raising the Dead
PART THREE: BEYOND THE CRASH
7: Return from Slump, and the Jobless and Joyless Recovery
8: Housing Market Meltdown, Rescue and Reform
9: Austerity and the Battles over Sovereign Debt
10: The Eurozone Crash
11: Global Rebalancing and Instability
12: Banking Reform
CLOSING THOUGHTS
BIBLIOGRAPHY

About the Author

Andrew Farlow, Research Fellow in Economics, Oriel College, University of Oxford, UK

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