Description
Book SynopsisThe crash of 2008 revealed that the world's central banks had failed to offset the financial imbalances that led to the crisis, and lacked the tools to respond effectively. This title provides an insider's look into how central banks have evolved and why they are critical to the functioning of market economies.
Trade ReviewNamed one of Financial Times (FT.com)'s Books of the Year in Nonfiction Round-Up in the Business & Economics list for 2010 "[T]he depth of its analysis will make Banking on the Future an important source of insights for years to come."--Ed Crooks, Financial Times "The best assessment yet of the role played by the leading western central banks--the U.S. Federal Reserve, the ECB and the Bank of England--in the run-up to the financial crisis and beyond, from two former insiders at the top level of UK policymaker."--Financial Times (FT Critics Pick 2010) "Buy the book with confidence."--Jane Fuller, Financial World "Books on central banking usually vie with pills as sleep inducers, but Banking on the Future: The Fall and Rise of Central Banking is actually a page-turner."--Andrew Allentuck, National Post "In this forensic and engaging overview, Susan Hough presents a frank, entertaining and personal review of the history of ideas, practice, personalities and experience in the science of earthquake prediction. Although Hough is a respected scientist, she takes a journalist's viewpoint here, not shying away from legitimate criticism of those she regards as friends, and taking on the credulous at the edge of, or even beyond, the mainstream scientific."--Ian Main, Times Higher Education "[A] valuable, accessible volume... This clear, nontechnical guide on the present and future of central banking from two eminent policy makers could not have come at a better time."--Choice "A better title for this book would have been: All You Ever Wanted to Know About Central Banking and More... Davies and Green provide much to inform and interest diverse audiences...[I]t's a book that practitioners and students of central banking need to have on their shelf."--Management Today "We get an insider's view of the nuts and bolts of central banking, but not so inside that the authors are uncritical. They readily identify the pressure to change regulations or advice when regulators feel under pressure to display expertise in new issues... These are snippets of insight that only critical insiders know how to capture."--Dick Bryan, Australian Review of Public Affairs
Table of ContentsPreface vii Abbreviations ix Introduction 1 Chapter One: What Is Central Banking and Why Is It Important? 9 Chapter Two: Monetary Stability 23 Chapter Three: Financial Stability 52 Chapter Four: Financial Infrastructure 90 Chapter Five: Asset Prices 115 Chapter Six: Structure, Status, and Accountability 141 Chapter Seven: Europe: A Special Case 182 Chapter Eight: Central Banking in Emerging Market Countries 212 Chapter Nine: Financial Resources, Costs, and Efficiency 236 Chapter Ten: International Cooperation 252 Chapter Eleven: Leadership 270 Chapter Twelve: An Agenda for Change 285 Afterword 297 Notes 301 Index 317