ECU Libraries Catalog

All Fall Down : debt, deregulation and financial crises / Jane D'Arista.

Author/creator D'Arista, Jane W. author.
Format Electronic and Book
Publication Info Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar Publishing, [2018]
Description1 online resource.
Supplemental Content EBSCOhost
Subject(s)
Contents Front Matter; Copyright; Contents; Tables; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction and summary; PART I The unraveling of the 1930s-era framework; 2. The euro market erodes US financial structure; 3. Commercial paper guarantees and the emergence of a parallel banking system; 4. ERISA moves savings into securities markets; PART IIDeregulation and financial innovation create the context for crisis; 5. An overview of financiar estructuring and its consequences; 6. Securitization; 7. Weaving the web of interconnectedness; 8. Opaque markets and opaque balance sheets
Contents 9. Growing concentration leads to "too big to fail"10. Regulating the post-crisis system; 11. Mending the financial safety net for savers; PART III The advent of globalization; 12. Dollar hegemony; 13. Foreign exchange reserves; 14. An overview of developments in global financial markets in the 1990s; PART IV Building toward crisis in the global economy; 15. Concerns and warnings; 16. Crises in the periphery of the global system; 17. Liquidity expansion in the period before the crisis; PART V Debt and the collapse of monetary control
Contents 18. The failure to halt the emergence and growth of the debt bubble; 19. Rising imbalances in credit flows; 20. Mounting risks of the continuing debt bubble in the new millennium; 21. How eroding monetary tools facilitated debt creation; 22. Monetary tools: what they are and how they function; 23. The inability of capital requirements to prevent or moderate financial crises; 24. How crisis reshaped the monetary toolkit; PART VI An agenda for monetary reform; 25. Introducing a systemic approach; 26. Creating a system-wide asset-based reserve system
Contents 27. Implementing policy under the current and proposed systems; 28. Implications of the proposed system for the conduct of policy; PART VII Reforming the privatized international monetary system; 29. Can special drawing rights replace the dollar and other national currencies as a reserve asset?; 30. Restructuring flows of private international investment into emerging and developing economies; 31. Reforming the international payments system; PART VIII Conclusion; 32. Building toward crisis in the global economy-again; Bibliography; Index
Abstract All Fall Down traces the ways in which changes in financial structure and regulation eroded monetary control and led to historically high levels of debt relative to GDP in both developed and emerging economies. Rising stocks of debt drove the global financial system into crisis in 2008 when households, businesses, financial institutions and the public sector in some countries strained to generate sufficient income for debt service. The stagnation and fall in asset prices that followed began the process of unwinding that led to a run on the financial sector by the financial sector.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Source of descriptionDescription based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on October 01, 2018).
Genre/formElectronic books.
ISBN9781788119498 electronic book
ISBN1788119495 electronic book

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