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British Banking - Continuity and Change from 1694 to the Present (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,198
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British Banking - Continuity and Change from 1694 to the Present (Hardcover)
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The Global Financial Crisis made its first appearance in Britain
towards the end of 2007 with the failure of the Northern Rock Bank.
It then reached an unparalleled intensity a year later when the
government was forced to intervene to prevent the collapse of
Lloyds/HBOS and RBS/Natwest. Before these events the British
banking system possessed a long established reputation for
resilience and competence that made it one of the most admired and
trusted in the world. The financial crisis of 2007/8, and the
subsequent revelations about the behaviour of bankers, destroyed
that reputation and drove a desire for a complete reform of the
British banking system. Forgotten in this headlong rush towards
radical restructuring were the reasons why the British banking
system had become so admired and trusted. The aim of this book is
to explain why the British banking system gained its reputation for
resilience and competence, maintained it for over 100 years, and
then lost it in such a rapid and spectacular fashion. To achieve
that aim requires a study of the entire banking system. Banks are
key components of a complex financial system continually
interacting with each other, and constantly changing over time,
This makes the conventional distinctions drawn between different
types of banks, including those specialising in international
finance, savings and loans, corporate lending, and retail deposits
and borrowing, inappropriate for any long-term analysis. The
distinctions between different types of banks were neither absolute
nor permanent but relative and temporary. Banks were also central
to both the payments system and the money market without which no
modern economy could function. What this book is about is the
development of the British banking system as a whole over more than
three centuries. Only with such an understanding is it possible to
appreciate what the British banking system achieved and then
maintained from the middle of the 19th century onwards, why it was
lost in such a short space of time, and what needs to be done to
return it to the position it once occupied. Without such an
understanding the mistakes of the recent past are destined to be
repeated time and gain.
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