Banking crises, liquidity, and credit lines : a macroeconomic perspective

Author(s)

    • Singh, Gurbachan

Bibliographic Information

Banking crises, liquidity, and credit lines : a macroeconomic perspective

Gurbachan Singh

(Routledge international studies in money and banking, 70)

Routledge, 2012

  • : hbk

Available at  / 17 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [236]-243

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The banking crisis in 2007-10 was one amongst many such crises in the past. This book provides a fresh approach to liquidity. It starts from basics and gradually builds up analysis of credit lines with few technicalities. Though the analysis is theoretical, the book provides a historical background, a macroeconomic perspective, and policy implications. An integrated view of the pre-1983 and the post-1983 literature is provided. A solution to the related problem of sudden outflow of funds from emerging economies is also suggested.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Bank Solvency and Systemic Stability 3. The Rationale for Demand Deposits (and Short-Term Funds) 4. Literature Review, and the Road Ahead 5. Near-Systemic Bank Runs, Given Flexible More-Reputed Bank 6. Systemic Bank Runs, Given Flexible Central Bank 7. Systemic Bank Runs, Given Gold Standard 8. Implications of Inelastic Supply of Desired Assets 9. Bank Runs, Portfolio Choice, and Adjustment Mechanism 10. Bank Runs, Liquidity, and Consumption Smoothing 11. Bank Runs, and the Broad Policy Framework 12. Sudden Capital Outflow, Emerging Economies, and Credit Lines 13. 100% Reserve Banking, and the Nature of Inefficiency 14. More on Banking Crisis and Liquidity 15. Theory and the Actual Experience 16. Summing Up

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