<p>Examines the progression of banking from an unregulated commercial bank to the multinational banking stage. Specifically addresses the nature of banking, the influence and patterns of regulatory constraints on domestic and uncontrolled banks, the move to and risks of multinational banking, and pr
Domestic and Multinational Banking
โ Scribed by Rae Weston
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 417
- Series
- Routledge Library Editions: Banking & Finance 33
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover
Domestic and Multinational Banking: The Effects of Monetary Policy
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Part 1: The Nature of Banking
1. The Origins of Modern Banking
2. The Essence of Banking
3. The Banker as a Retailer of Services
4. Uncontrolled Banking: The Fischer Black Model
5. A Modified Unregulated World
6. The Liability Side of a Bank's Business: Deposits and Capital
7. Loans and the Holding of Reserves
8. The Costs of Banking Operations
9. Constraints on the Scale of Operations
10. The Diagrammatic Model
11. Conclusion
Part 2: The Impact of Regulation on Domestic Banks
1. Introduction
2. The Regulation of Banking
3. Controls on Banking in the United Kingdom
4. The Regulation of Banking in France
5. Banking Regulation in the Federal Republic of Germany
6. The Banking System in the Netherlands
7. Banking Regulation in Belgium 1
8. Banking in Ireland
9. The Control of Banking in Italy
10. Banking Regulation in Denmark
11. Banking Regulation in Norway
12. Banking Regulation in a United Europe
13. Banking Regulation in the United States
14. Banking Controls in Japan
15. Banking Regulation and Reform in Canada
16. Banking Regulation in South Africa
17. The Banking System in Australia
18. The Development of Banking in Papua New Guinea
19. Changing Banking Regulations in New Zealand
20. The New Banking System in Indonesia
21. The Development of Banking Regulation in Malaysia
22. Banking in the Arab Republic of Egypt
23. Conclusion
Part 3: Introducing Regulation into the Model of Uncontrolled banking
1. Introduction
2. The Impact of Reserve Requirements
3. The Effect of Interest Rate Constraints
4. The Operation of Credit Ceilings as a Constraint
5. The Impact of Indirect or Market Controls
6. The Role of Capital under Regulation
7. The Combination of Constraints
8. Is Regulation Effective?
9. Diversification: Domestic and International
10. Conclusion
Part 4: The Move to Multinational Banking
1. Introduction
2. From International to Multinational Banking
3. Moving into Multinational Banking
4. The Nature of Multinational Banking
5. Consortium Banking
6. Roll- over Risk and Mismatching
7. Foreign Exchange Transactions: Banking Risk and Currency Risk
8. Foreign Exchange Transactions: Country Risk
9. Exchange Rate Risk: Sovereign Risk
10. Information Flows and the Management of Multinational Banks
11. Diagrammatic Illustrations of Multinational Bank Operations
12. Conclusion
Part 5: The Supervision and Regulation of Multinational Banking
1. Introduction
2. Prudential Supervision and Multinational Banking
3. A Nationalistic Approach: The Control of Foreign Banks in Canada
4. Multinational Bank Regulation in the United States
5. Conclusion
Epilogue
Index
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