The Oxford Handbook of Banking and Financial History

Youssef Cassis editor Catherine R Schenk editor Richard S Grossman editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:19th May '16

£120.00

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The Oxford Handbook of Banking and Financial History cover

The financial crisis of 2008 aroused widespread interest in banking and financial history among policy makers, academics, journalists, and even bankers, in addition to the wider public. References in the press to the term 'Great Depression' spiked after the failure of Lehman Brothers in November 2008, with similar surges in references to 'economic history' at various times during the financial turbulence. In an attempt to better understand the magnitude of the shock, there was a demand for historical parallels. How severe was the financial crash? Was it, in fact, the most severe financial crisis since the Great Depression? Were its causes unique or part of a well-known historical pattern? And have financial crises always led to severe depressions? Historical reflection on the recent financial crises and the long-term development of the financial system go hand in hand. This volume provides the material for such a reflection by presenting the state of the art in banking and financial history. Nineteen highly regarded experts present chapters on the economic and financial side of banking and financial activities, primarily though not solely in advanced economies, in a long-term comparative perspective. In addition to paying attention to general issues, not least those related to theoretical and methodological aspects of the discipline, the volume approaches the banking and financial world from four distinct but interrelated angles: financial institutions, financial markets, financial regulation, and financial crises.

The book is a good one, indeed financial economists and graduate students in particular will be well served to read it. I feel a lot of finance research today is conducted in the absence of historical context, and so this book is a good start to filling that void, especially since (as far as I am aware) there is no equivalent alternative out there. * Phong T. H. Ngo (Australian National University), Economic Record *
The global financial crisis that began in 2007-08 and continued to rattle the Eurozone countries after 2010 has certainly been good for the market for financial history. The Oxford Handbook of Banking and Financial History is clearly a response to these events. In their introductory chapter, the editors set out their ambitious agenda, which is to deal with the individual parts of our modern complex financial system and trace how each has evolved over time. Each chapter ends with some insight into how the current turmoil in global banking and finance might affect part of the global financial system. This broad-ranging approach is very much in keeping with current analysis by policy economists, who have become very sensitive to how our financial system intertwines banks. * Larry Neil, University of Illinois *

ISBN: 9780199658626

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 1102g

556 pages