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Better Bankers, Better Banks - Promoting Good Business through Contractual Commitment (Hardcover)
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Better Bankers, Better Banks - Promoting Good Business through Contractual Commitment (Hardcover)
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Taking financial risks is an essential part of what banks do, but
there's no clear sense of what constitutes responsible risk. Taking
legal risks seems to have become part of what banks do as well.
Since the financial crisis, Congress has passed copious amounts of
legislation aimed at curbing banks' risky behavior. Lawsuits
against large banks have cost them billions. Yet bad behavior
continues to plague the industry. Why isn't there more change? In
Better Bankers, Better Banks, Claire A. Hill and Richard W. Painter
look back at the history of banking and show how the current
culture of bad behavior-dramatized by the corrupt, cocaine-snorting
bankers of The Wolf of Wall Street-came to be. In the early 1980s,
banks went from partnerships whose partners had personal liability
to corporations whose managers had no such liability and could take
risks with other people's money. A major reason bankers remain
resistant to change, Hill and Painter argue, is that while banks
have been faced with large fines, penalties, and legal fees-which
have exceeded one hundred billion dollars since the onset of the
crisis-the banks (which really means the banks'shareholders) have
paid them, not the bankers themselves. The problem also extends
well beyond the pursuit of profit to the issue of how success is
defined within the banking industry, where highly paid bankers
clamor for status and clients may regard as inevitable bankers who
prioritize their own self-interest. While many solutions have been
proposed, Hill and Painter show that a successful transformation of
banker behavior must begin with the bankers themselves. Bankers
must be personally liable from their own assets for some portion of
the bank's losses from excessive risk-taking and illegal behavior.
This would instill a culture that discourages such behavior and in
turn influence the sorts of behavior society celebrates or
condemns. Despite many sensible proposals seeking to reign in
excessive risk-taking, the continuing trajectory of scandals
suggests that we're far from ready to avert the next crisis. Better
Bankers, Better Banks is a refreshing call for bankers to return to
the idea that theirs is a noble profession.
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