The terms system and industry are frequently used
interchangeably--and with obfuscatory results. Members of Congress
are especially prone to do so, and would profit from a perusal of
the volume at hand. So will most bankers. The author, Jeremy
Taylor, a bank officer, is typical of the younger breed of banking
writers in combining hands-on practical experience with the ability
to handle high-powered abstractions successfully. . . . This book
is the latest in a useful series of publications by Quorum Books,
generally dissident in both perspective and tone, yet thoroughly
persuasive in substance. "Bankers Monthly"
The continuing rise in bank failures, including newsmaking
crashes at such banks as Penn Square and Continental Illinois,
along with the insolvency of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation Fund, has eroded confidence in the nation's banking
system. Taylor offers an analysis of the implications that events
over the past years have had for the future operation of the U.S.
banking system. In analyzing why the system is in such
disequilibrium, Taylor presents a systemic view of banking
operations and functions, a perspective he argues has been lacking
in previous works on the subject. He also suggests ways to remedy
the current crisis situation and restore individual and
institutional customer confidence.
Taylor's systemic approach enables him to compare the present
U.S. situation to the British banking crisis of 1973-1975. He
analyzes a series of bank failures and explains that the FDIC has
three alternatives to bank failures: payoffs, bailouts, and
buyouts. He introduces a new model designed to help the financial
and banking communities resolve certain difficulties and proposes
new ways of dealing with credit risk and credit malfunction.
Finally, Taylor stresses the importance of social consensus and the
function played by public opinion in aiding or avoiding potential
bank failures. An important addition to the banking and finance
curriculum, this book will also benefit banking executives and
policymakers concerned with today's unacceptably high level of bank
failure.
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