Description

Book Synopsis
Macroprudential policy focuses on the financial system as a whole, as distinct from individual institutions, and its objective is to limit the costs to the real economy from system-wide distress of the financial sector. This book offers a critical, contextual and comparative examination of the nature of macroprudential policy as an emerging legal domain. It explores why macroprudential policy is necessary and how best to design tailored legal, institutional and governance frameworks that support the various supervisory stages in macroprudential regimes. Questions addressed relate to the design of the macroprudential mandate and institutional structures, independence, transparency and accountability arrangements, the nature and limitations of macroprudential authorities' supervisory powers, as well as the challenges that are likely to be encountered during the generation, collection and analysis of data and the use of macroprudential tools. The book extends well beyond being a 'one-stop-shop' introduction on all aspects of macroprudential policy. It digs deeper and does the heavy lifting by analysing the unique features of macroprudential policy that set it apart from other policy areas; examining the pulling (and at times, contradicting) forces which affect it and surfacing its complex and evolutionary nature and the unique challenges confronting macroprudential authorities. In order to derive and capture the theoretical foundations of macroprudential policy and support the high-level suggestions made on how to operationalise it, the book draws on established scholarships from international law as well as theories developed in the Organisational Behaviour field. It presents and explains the law within the context of the most recent empirical research in economics, including research on the prevalent governance structure of macroprudential policy, its interaction with other policy areas and the effectiveness of macroprudential tools. The normative discussion in the book is also grounded in practical specificities through detailed critical analysis of macroprudential policy frameworks at the national level (UK and US), regional level (EU) and global level (FSB, IMF and BIS).

Trade Review
'[...], the book is an impressive piece on a most important and contemporary topic. [...] The variety of topics discussed in the book, the uniqueness of the topics, the in-depth analysis of the various issues, the theoretical discussions alongside practical conclusions and insights, all these make the book an important contribution to the field.' -- Professor Ruth Plato-Shinar, Journal of International Banking Law and Regulation, 2021

Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction and Background (p. 1) Chapter 2. A Macroprudential Mandate: How to Operationalise it (p. 21) Chapter 3. Institutional and Procedural Design for Macroprudential Regimes: Institutional Models and the Nature of the Decision-Making Process (p. 53) Chapter 4. Powers of Macroprudential Authorities and the Use of Soft Law (p. 83) Chapter 5. Formulating a Taxonomy of Supervisory Approaches in Macroprudential Policymaking (p. 121) Chapter 6. Activating and Calibrating Macroprudential Instruments (p. 149) Chapter 7. Independence, Accountability and Transparency of Macroprudential Policy (p. 177) Chapter 8. A Non-Dichotomous View of Macroprudential Policy and Other Policy Areas (p. 217) Chapter 9. Data Collection and Analysis in Macroprudential Policy: An Epistemic View (p. 257) Chapter 10. The Global Architecture of Systemic Risk Regulation and Supervision (p. 295)

Legal Foundations of Macroprudential Policy: An

Product form

£94.05

Includes FREE delivery

RRP £99.00 – you save £4.95 (5%)

Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 27 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Anat Keller

Out of stock


    View other formats and editions of Legal Foundations of Macroprudential Policy: An by Anat Keller

    Publisher: Intersentia Ltd
    Publication Date: 12/06/2020
    ISBN13: 9781780687872, 978-1780687872
    ISBN10: 1780687877

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Macroprudential policy focuses on the financial system as a whole, as distinct from individual institutions, and its objective is to limit the costs to the real economy from system-wide distress of the financial sector. This book offers a critical, contextual and comparative examination of the nature of macroprudential policy as an emerging legal domain. It explores why macroprudential policy is necessary and how best to design tailored legal, institutional and governance frameworks that support the various supervisory stages in macroprudential regimes. Questions addressed relate to the design of the macroprudential mandate and institutional structures, independence, transparency and accountability arrangements, the nature and limitations of macroprudential authorities' supervisory powers, as well as the challenges that are likely to be encountered during the generation, collection and analysis of data and the use of macroprudential tools. The book extends well beyond being a 'one-stop-shop' introduction on all aspects of macroprudential policy. It digs deeper and does the heavy lifting by analysing the unique features of macroprudential policy that set it apart from other policy areas; examining the pulling (and at times, contradicting) forces which affect it and surfacing its complex and evolutionary nature and the unique challenges confronting macroprudential authorities. In order to derive and capture the theoretical foundations of macroprudential policy and support the high-level suggestions made on how to operationalise it, the book draws on established scholarships from international law as well as theories developed in the Organisational Behaviour field. It presents and explains the law within the context of the most recent empirical research in economics, including research on the prevalent governance structure of macroprudential policy, its interaction with other policy areas and the effectiveness of macroprudential tools. The normative discussion in the book is also grounded in practical specificities through detailed critical analysis of macroprudential policy frameworks at the national level (UK and US), regional level (EU) and global level (FSB, IMF and BIS).

    Trade Review
    '[...], the book is an impressive piece on a most important and contemporary topic. [...] The variety of topics discussed in the book, the uniqueness of the topics, the in-depth analysis of the various issues, the theoretical discussions alongside practical conclusions and insights, all these make the book an important contribution to the field.' -- Professor Ruth Plato-Shinar, Journal of International Banking Law and Regulation, 2021

    Table of Contents
    Chapter 1. Introduction and Background (p. 1) Chapter 2. A Macroprudential Mandate: How to Operationalise it (p. 21) Chapter 3. Institutional and Procedural Design for Macroprudential Regimes: Institutional Models and the Nature of the Decision-Making Process (p. 53) Chapter 4. Powers of Macroprudential Authorities and the Use of Soft Law (p. 83) Chapter 5. Formulating a Taxonomy of Supervisory Approaches in Macroprudential Policymaking (p. 121) Chapter 6. Activating and Calibrating Macroprudential Instruments (p. 149) Chapter 7. Independence, Accountability and Transparency of Macroprudential Policy (p. 177) Chapter 8. A Non-Dichotomous View of Macroprudential Policy and Other Policy Areas (p. 217) Chapter 9. Data Collection and Analysis in Macroprudential Policy: An Epistemic View (p. 257) Chapter 10. The Global Architecture of Systemic Risk Regulation and Supervision (p. 295)

    Recently viewed products

    © 2025 Book Curl

      • American Express
      • Apple Pay
      • Diners Club
      • Discover
      • Google Pay
      • Maestro
      • Mastercard
      • PayPal
      • Shop Pay
      • Union Pay
      • Visa

      Login

      Forgot your password?

      Don't have an account yet?
      Create account