Knowledge Capture in Financial Regulation Data Information and Knowledge Asymmetries in the US Financial Crisis 1st Edition by Eva Becker – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 3658136669, 9783658136666
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 3658136669
ISBN 13: 9783658136666
Author: Eva Becker
Eva Becker assesses the US financial crisis as a crisis of regulatory data, information and knowledge. Based on the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission’s interviews as well her own interviews, and drawing on Capture Theory and recent reformulations thereof, she develops “knowledge capture” as a theoretic framework to assess financial regulation under conditions of 21st century complexity.
Knowledge Capture in Financial Regulation Data Information and Knowledge Asymmetries in the US Financial Crisis 1st Table of contents:
1 Introduction
1.1 Eliminating Hobson’s Choice, Or: A Binary Model of Systemic Risk
1.2 The Argument in Brief
1.3 Literature Overview and Current State of Research
1.4 Research Approach
2 Narratives of the Global Financial Crisis
2.1 From 1980 to 2010: Dominant Beliefs and Paradigm Shifts
2.2 A Pre- and Post-Crisis Understanding of Systemic Risk
2.2.1 A Systems Theory Perspective on Systemic Risk
2.2.2 A Politico-Economic Approach to Systemic Risk
2.2.3 A Short Excursus on the LTCM Rescue of 1998
2.3 Entering the Stage of 21st Century Financial Folly
3 Multi-Level Complexity: The 21st Century Financial System
3.1 Interconnectedness and Contagion: Complexity at the Systems Level
3.2 The Role and Nature of 21st Century Financial Institutions
3.2.1 Understanding the Too Big to Fail Phenomenon
3.2.2 Too Complex to Manage, or: Jamie Dimon Wishes to See Everything
3.2.3 A Short Note on Being Too Big to Jail
3.2.4 Differentiating Between Systemic Risk and TBTF
3.3 Complex Products – Financial Weapons of Mass-Destruction?
3.4 Innovators vs. Regulators: Science Running Amok
3.5 Can and Should Financial Complexity be Eliminated?
4 US Policy Responses to the Crisis
4.1 Stretching the Law: Case-by-Case Responses in the US
4.2 TARP as a System-Wide, Medium-Term Policy Response
4.3 The Regulatory Overhaul: Dodd-Frank as a System-Wide Policy Response
4.3.1 The Financial Stability Oversight Council
4.3.2 The Office of Financial Research
4.3.3 The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
4.3.4 Stress Tests and Living Wills
4.3.5 Ending TBTF: Orderly Liquidation and the Ban on Bailouts
4.4 Putting the US into Context: A Short Look at EU Policy Responses
4.4.1 The EU Crisis, and the Weaknesses it Revealed
4.4.2 Transnational vs. National Supervision: The Closer the Better Informed?
4.4.3 The New European System of Financial Supervision
4.4.4 The European Systemic Risk Board
4.4.5 The European Central Bank
4.5 Changes in Global Financial Governance: The Establishment of the FSB
4.6 Financial Reform Revisited: Where Do We Stand Today?
5 Knowledge Asymmetries in Regulation
5.1 A Working Definition of Data, Information and Knowledge
5.2 Knowledge Related Problems in Financial Regulation
5.2.1 Data-Related Problems: Information Buried in Excel-Spreadsheets
5.2.2 A Four-Category-Framework of Information Asymmetries
5.2.3 Knowledge Asymmetries: Regulatees Racing Ahead
5.2.4 Feigned and Factual Non-Knowledge
5.3 Boundedly Rational Financial Regulators
5.4 Representatives vs. Experts: The Privatization of Legitimacy
5.5 Keeping Pace with the Market, or: Can the OFR Enlighten Regulators?
6 Knowledge Capture: A Theoretic Framework
6.1 Introduction to the Theory of Economic Regulation
6.2 Capture Diagnoses in the Recent Financial Crisis
6.3 New Perspectives on Regulation: Information and Complexity Capture
6.4 Knowledge Capture: Experts Hijacking Regulators
6.5 Solutions to Knowledge Capture Problems
7 Conclusion: Policy Implications and Future Research
7.1 Tackling Complexity Through Regulation
7.2 Future Financial Reform
7.3 Future Research
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Eva Becker,Capture,Financial Regulation,Data Information,Knowledge Asymmetries,Financial Crisis