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Books > Money & Finance
Law and the Financial System: Securitization and Asset Backed
Securities provides students and practitioners with a comprehensive
source of materials and references for understanding the process
and issues that surround the conversion of illiquid financial
assets into tradable securities. The book begins with an overview
of the financial system and the place of securitization in the
system. The book focuses on the process and law of securitization
and is derived largely from Tamar Frankel's treaties,
Securitization (2nd ed. 2005). The book concludes with a global
view of securitization and an assessment of the impact and future
of securitizing financial assets. The legal text is enhanced with
case studies and simulation exercises that bring context and
practical application to the subject. Study questions covering law,
business and public policy provide students with an opportunity to
discuss and debate areas where answers are complex and often
indeterminate. Simulation exercises enable students to test their
own ideas with their peers using real world examples. The book can
be used as a stand alone course on securitization or as a
supplementary text for courses on financial regulation.
Practitioners will find the book a useful desk reference. This is
the second book co-authored by Mark Fagan and Tamar Frankel. The
first was "Trust and Honesty in the Real World" (2007). About the
authors: Tamar Frankel authored Fiduciary Law (2008), Trust and
Honesty, America's Business Culture at a Crossroad (2006),
Securitization (2d.ed 2006), The Regulation of Money Managers (2d
ed. 2001 with Ann Taylor Schwing), and more than 70 articles. A
long-time member of the Boston University School of Law faculty,
Professor Frankel was a visiting scholar at the Securities and
Exchange Commission and at the Brookings Institution. A native of
Israel, Professor Frankel served in the Israeli Air Force, was an
assistant attorney general for Israel's Ministry of Justice and the
legal advisor of the State of Israel Bonds Organization in Europe.
She practiced in Israel, Boston and Washington, D.C. and is a
member of the Massachusetts Bar, the American Law Institute, and
The American Bar Foundation. Mr. Fagan's research centers on the
role of regulation in competitive markets. He has written about the
impact of deregulation in the financial, transportation and
electricity sectors. He teaches courses and guest lectures at
Boston University School of Law and at Harvard Kennedy School. He
has been a frequent seminar speaker at Harvard Kennedy School's
Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government; recent topics
include the subprime disaster, securitization, Ponzi schemes, and
financial bubbles. Mark Fagan is a founding partner of Norbridge,
Inc. a general management consulting firm. He works with clients in
the transportation, telecommunications and utility industries as
they grapple with increasing shareholder value in a deregulated
world. Prior to Norbridge, he was a Vice President of Mercer
Management Consulting.
This book contains eight papers focusing on factors associated with
the growth of government. There is a large literature in public
economics, especially public choice, on the determinants of the
growth of government. The papers in this volume focus on a number
of arguments related to why government has grown in many developed
countries during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Chapters
focus on taxation, trade openness, technology, income changes, and
tax compliance. The volume features prominent scholars such as
Nobel Laureate Gary Becker, Casey Mulligan, Gordon Tullock, Randall
Holcombe, and Tyler Cowen.
How do we incorporate analytical thinking into public policy
decisions? Stuart Shapiro confronts this issue in Analysis and
Public Policy by looking at various types of analysis, and
discussing how they are used in regulatory policy-making in the US.
By looking at the successes and failures of incorporating
cost-benefit analysis, risk assessment, and environmental impact
assessment, he draws broader lessons on its use, focusing on the
interactions between analysis and political factors, legal
structures and bureaucratic organizations as possible areas for
reform.Utilizing empirical and qualitative research, Shapiro
analyzes four different forms of analysis: cost-benefit analysis,
risk assessment, environmental impact assessment, and impact
analysis. After interviewing nearly fifty individuals who have
served in high levels of government, and who have made countless
regulatory policy decisions in their careers, Shapiro argues that
advocates must become less ambitious and should craft requirements
for simpler and clearer analysis. Such analysis, particularly if
informed by public participation, can do a great deal to improve
government decisions. As this book details the relationship between
analysis and institutional factors such as politics, bureaucracy,
and law, it is appropriate for a variety of readers, such as
scholars of policy, students, scholars of regulation, and
congressional and state legislative staff looking to create new
analytical requirements.
This book provides a comprehensive presentation on energy-efficient
management in urban rail transit system via operations research and
uncertain optimization methods. It is suitable for researchers,
engineers, and students in the fields of transport management. The
readers will learn numerous new modeling ideas on reducing tractive
energy consumption and improving regenerative energy utilization,
and find this work a useful reference.
This book offers a series of statistical tests to determine if the
"crowd out" problem, known to hinder the effectiveness of Keynesian
economic stimulus programs, can be overcome by monetary programs.
It concludes there are programs that can do this, specifically
"accommodative monetary policy." They were not used to any great
extent prior to the Quantitative Easing program in 2008, causing
the failure of many fiscal stimulus programs through no fault of
their own. The book includes exhaustive statistical tests to prove
this point. There is also a policy analysis section of the book. It
examines how effectively the Federal Reserve's anti-crowd out
programs have actually worked, to the extent they were undertaken
at all. It finds statistical evidence that using commercial and
savings banks instead of investment banks when implementing
accommodating monetary policy would have markedly improved their
effectiveness. This volume, with its companion volume Why Fiscal
Stimulus Programs Fail, Volume 2: Statistical Tests Comparing
Monetary Policy to Growth, provides 1000 separate statistical tests
on the US economy to prove these assertions.
The Handbook of Research on E-Portfolios is the single source for
comprehensive coverage of the major themes of e-portfolios,
addressing all of the major issues, from concept to technology to
implementation. It is the first reference publication to provide a
complete investigation on a variety of e-portfolio uses through
case studies and supporting technologies, and also explains the
conceptual thinking behind current uses and potential uses not yet
implemented. Over 70 international experts with countless years of
experience lend this handbook the credibility that assures its
readers of its extensive, recent, and reliable content. ""The
Handbook of Research on E-Portfolios"" is the first handbook to
investigate commercial and academic e-portfolio systems -
home-grown, off the shelf, and open source - and to supply
proof-of-concept evidence of successful systems.
This book provides a long-term perspective on policies regarding
intergovernmental grants in the US since the 1970s. This period
spans six presidential administrations and encompasses a diverse
set of political and economic conditions. Containing original
research, this book contributes to critical assessments of
intergovernmental grant issues such as: whether state and local
government spending responds symmetrically to increases or
decreases in federal aid the effects of converting categorical
grants to block grants on program spending; and the political
economy of federal aid distribution. >The author's empirical
analyses are based on a unique data set of US federal
intergovernmental grants and cover a range of programs, including
transportation, substance abuse prevention and treatment, and
community development and welfare. The book is a rich source of
material on intergovernmental grants and fiscal relations for
scholars and practitioners in public policy, political science,
economics and public finance.
This book examines the international political economy of China's
exchange rate policy making from theoretical and empirical
perspectives. It identifies the limitations in the existing
Economics studies on the RMB exchange rate and the research gap of
the Comparative Political Economy (CPE) and International Political
Economy (IPE) approaches to exchange rate politics. The author
develops a three-level game framework for China's exchange rate
policy making based on revision and synthesis of the existing CPE
and IPE approaches, which provides a richer portrait of the
dynamism and complexity of China's exchange rate policy making. The
book has applied the three-level game framework to empirically
analyzing China's exchange rate policy making under the Hu-Wen
administration. The book also discusses some further exploration of
China's exchange rate policy in the Xi era and comparative case
study of exchange rate policy making. It is a timely and rigorous
study on the role that international and domestic politics play in
forging China's exchange rate policy making in the twenty-first
century.
This book explores current digitalization issues in finance and
accounting with particular focus on emerging and transitioning
markets. It features models, empirical studies and cases studies on
topics such as Fintech, blockchain technology, financing renewable
energy, and XBRL usage from sectors such health care, pharmacology,
transportation, and education. Such a complex view of current
economic phenomena makes the volume attractive not only for
academia, but also for regulators and policy-makers, when
deliberating the potential outcome of competing regulatory
mechanisms.
This collection of 20 essays examines the merits of land-value
taxation and distinguishes it from the conventional property tax
because it has a more benign economic influence. It includes four
essays by William S. Vickrey, the 1996 Nobel laureate in economics.
The purpose of this book is to study the association of corporate
environmental responsibility (CER) with financial performance,
capital structure, innovative activities, corporate risk, working
capital management and accounting quality. Undoubtedly, CER has
been developed into a crucial corporate issue around the world. CER
has been incorporated within various sectors, countries and
includes many types of activities and dimensions. A fundamental
issue that is addressed in this book, is how corporate finance and
accounting are affected by CER activities and how it impacts
company performance. In order to analyse this interrelation, the
authors focus on a sample of firms from 28 EU member countries. The
purpose of this book is to study the association of CER with
financial performance, capital structure, innovative activities,
corporate risk, working capital management and accounting quality.
The book also intends to provide useful policy recommendations as
well as to offer constructive impulses for future research.
Since the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia has
experienced a process of rapid fiscal decentralisation: its 88
regions are now in charge of almost half of total budgetary
expenditure, while an overhaul of the revenue allocation system has
given them substantial control over locally collected revenue.
These regions are highly diverse in climate, natural resources and
economic development, with some much better equipped than others to
adjust to market conditions. Fiscal Federalism in Russia examines
the combined impact of decentralisation and diversity on regional
equality of service provision and in particular the provision of
education. The book begins with an analysis of the system of
intergovernmental transfers and goes on to explore the nature and
extent of disparities in education spending, paying particular
attention to regions where spending has fallen furthest. The book
also contains a case study of the allocation decisions affecting
the education sector within a single region, Novgorod Oblast, in
North-West Russia. Based entirely on field research, the study
provides a rare insight into the decision making process at
regional and local level, as well as an analysis of the extent of
internal revenue and spending disparities. Academics, researchers
and those interested in decentralisation or the economics of
transition will warmly welcome this detailed analysis of the
direction and impact of inter-governmental transfers in Russia.
The late seventeenth century was a crucial period in English
financial history. A host of joint-stock companies emerged offering
the opportunity for investment in projects ranging from the
manufacture of paper to the search for sunken treasure. Driven by
the demands of the Nine Years' War, the state also employed
innovative tactics to attract money, its most famous scheme being
the incorporation of the Bank of England. This 2009 book provides a
comprehensive study of the choices and actions of the investors who
enthusiastically embraced London's new financial market. It
highlights the interactions between public and private finance,
looks at how information circulated around the market and was used
by speculators and investors, and documents the establishment of
the institutions - the Bank of England, the national debt and an
active secondary market in that debt - on which England's financial
system was built.
This book provides an overview of the historical financial reforms
and regulatory changes in China, highlighting the background to and
causes of changes in the income structure of China's banks. It also
investigates ongoing concerns with regard to banking
diversification in China, and its consequences, amid the global
trend of banks' shift to non-traditional businesses. Focusing on
three critical aspects of bank-income diversification, namely the
effects on profitability, risk level, and efficiency, it employs
the concept of systemically important banks, which describes the
scale and degree of influence a bank has in global and domestic
financial markets. More importantly, rather than replicating
techniques employed in the research on developed markets, it
applies several improved methodologies to address bank
diversification in the specific context created by China's unique
institutional background and data characteristics, such as GMM-type
threshold models and stochastic frontier analysis with the within
maximum likelihood estimation. Shedding new light on the current
status of income diversification in the Chinese banking sector,
this book is a valuable resource for readers in fields such as
banking and financial stability. It will also help banking
professionals and financial regulatory authorities to better
understand the reform of China's financial industry and the future
direction of banking.
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