Description
This book uses case studies and in-depth analysis of recent legislation to explain why taxpayer-funded bail-outs are necessary for successful bank resolutions.
About the Author
Johan A. Lybeck is CEO of Finanskonsult AB. As an academic, he has been, inter alia, a Chaired Professor of Economics, an Associate Research Professor of Econometrics and an Adjunct Professor of Finance. His banking career includes positions as Senior Vice President of Swedbank (Stockholm) in charge of financial strategy and Chief Economist at Matteus Bank. He is the author of A Global History of the Financial Crash of 2007-2010 (Cambridge, 2011).
Reviews
'This book offers a deep dive into the issue of how to handle failing banks. The topic is important for understanding recent events in the US, current events in Europe, and much of what we will experience in the future. The author's main contribution is to provide detailed and well-researched case studies of what happened in particular banks - some of which experienced various forms of bailout, while others (or their investors) were subject to various kinds of bail-ins.' Simon Johnson, Ronald A. Kurtz (1954) Professor of Entrepreneurship, MIT Sloan School of Management
'Whatever opinion one holds on the author's view about the relative merits of bailing in or bailing out, this book makes a major contribution through its long chronology of events in the global financial crisis and its extensive set of case studies of the treatment of bank problems in that period. Other books exist which look at single countries, primarily the US, but there is no equivalent which considers the problems in both the US and Europe so thoroughly.' David Mayes, University of Auckland Business School
Book Information
ISBN 9781107514508
Author Johan A. Lybeck
Format Paperback
Page Count 594
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 850g
Dimensions(mm) 227mm * 162mm * 32mm