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The Politics of Regime Complexity in International Derivatives Regulation (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,565
Discovery Miles 25 650
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The Politics of Regime Complexity in International Derivatives Regulation (Hardcover)
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Total price: R2,575
Discovery Miles: 25 750
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This book provides the first comprehensive account of post-crisis
international regulation of derivatives by bringing together the
international relations literature on regime complexity and the
international political economy literature on financial regulation.
It addresses three questions: What factors drove international
standard-setting on derivatives post-crisis? Why did international
regime complexity emerge? And how was it managed and with what
outcomes? This research innovatively combines a state-centric, a
transgovernmental, and business-led explanations. It examines all
the main sets of standards (or elemental regimes) concerning
various aspects of derivatives markets, namely: trading, clearing,
and reporting of derivatives; resilience, recovery and resolution
of central counterparties; capital requirements for bank exposures
to central counterparties and derivatives; margins for derivatives
non-centrally cleared. It is argued that regime complexity in
derivatives ensued from the multi-dimensionality and the
interlinkages of the problems to tackle, especially given the fact
that it was a new policy area without a focal international
standard-setter. Despite these challenges, international
cooperation resulted in relatively precise, stringent, and
consistent rules, even though there was variation across standards.
The main jurisdictions played an important role in managing regime
complexity, but their effectiveness was constrained by limited
domestic coordination. Networks of regulators gathered in
international standard-setting bodies deployed a variety of formal
and informal coordination tools to deal with regime complexity. The
financial industry, at times, lobbied for less precise and
stringent rules and engaged in 'venue shopping', whereas, other
times, it contributed to the quest for regulatory consistency.
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