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163 result(s) for "Eatwell, John"
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Global governance of financial systems : the international regulation of systemic risk
This book sets forth the economic rationale for international financial regulation and what role, if any, international regulation can play in effectively managing systemic risk while providing accountability to all affected nations. The book suggests that a particular type of global governance structure is necessary to have more efficient regulation of the international financial systems. The book defines global governance of financial systems to involve three main principles: effectiveness in devising efficient regulatory standards and rules; accountability in decision-making structure and chain of command; and legitimacy, meaning that those subject to international regulatory standards have participated in some meaningful way in their development.
International capital markets : systems in transition
This title is comprised of 19 commissioned articles which are mainly focused on the timely global issues of volatility in equity and foreign exchange markets and the regulatory scene in developed and emerging markets. The papers provide a cutting-edge overview of general issues regarding world capital markets, experience in developing countries, and capital market regulation, which many economists believe could turn into the number one topic in international business and economics very soon. The articles were financed with grants from the Ford Foundation to New School University and the University of Cambridge. These subjects are important to professionals in the banking/financial services sectors, regulators and policy makers at the government level, think tanks, and graduate level college courses in international financial markets and international economics.
Britain and America: Ameliorating Unilateralism
Shifting UK attitudes toward US unilateralism in international relations are studied. Three factors that shaped UK attitudes toward the US from the end of WWII to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks are identified: UK recognition of the US's imperialist objectives; UK strategy of retaining international influence by siding with the US; & UK support for the US's heretofore multilateral approach to international relations. Despite the UK's tacit condemnation of US unilateralism, it is stressed that both countries are committed to sovereignty & shared similar perspectives regarding military intervention in the former Yugoslavia. It is then contended that the British public cannot comprehend the US governments unilateralist approach & that this miscomprehension has engendered feelings of alienation & fear toward the US amongst British people. Multiple recommendations for enhancing UK-US foreign relations are suggested to the current US administration, e.g., adopting a more multilateral perspective to international relations. J. W. Parker
Global Governance of Financial Systems
The book sets forth the economic rationale for international financial regulation and what role, if any, international regulation can play in effectively managing systemic risk while providing accountability to all affected nations. The book suggests that a particular type of global governance structure is necessary to have more efficient regulation of the international financial systems.
Unemployment: national policies in a global economy
Two issues have dominated the recent employment experience of the major industrial countries: first, the common rise in unemployment throughout the OECD; second, the diversity in the scale and content of that rise as between, on the one hand, the core of the European Union and Australia, and, on the other hand, North America. The growth and persistence of unemployment may be the result of the deregulation of global financial markets in the 1970s that has been followed by huge growth in short-term capital flows. These flows have produced a significant increase in risk aversion in public sector and private sectors. This is the major source of deflationary pressures and persistent unemployment throughout the world. Those pressures could have been substantially mitigated if a key lesson had been drawn from the development of domestic financial markets - liberal markets are only efficient if they are efficiently regulated.