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This collection offers a comparative overview of how financial
regulations have evolved in various European countries since the
introduction of the single European market in 1986. It includes a
number of country studies which provides a narrative of the
domestic financial regulatory structure at the beginning of the
period, as well the means by which the EU Directives have been
introduced into domestic legislation and the impact on the
financial structure of the economy. In particular, studies
highlight how the discretion allowed by the Directives has been
used to meet the then existing domestic conditions and financial
structure as well as how they have modified that structure.
Countries covered are France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Estonia,
Hungary and Slovenia. The book also contains an overview of
regulatory changes in the UK and Nordic countries, and in
post-crisis USA. This comparative approach raises questions about
whether past and more recent regulatory changes have in fact
contributed to increase financial stability in the EU. The
comparative analysis provided in this book raises questions on
whether the past and more recent changes are contributing to
increase the financial stability and efficiency of individual banks
and national financial systems. The crisis has demonstrated the
drawbacks of formulating the regulatory framework on standards
borrowed from the best industry practices from the large developed
countries, originally designed exclusively for large global banks,
but now applied to all financial institutions.
This collection offers a comparative overview of how financial
regulations have evolved in various European countries since the
introduction of the single European market in 1986. It includes a
number of country studies which provides a narrative of the
domestic financial regulatory structure at the beginning of the
period, as well the means by which the EU Directives have been
introduced into domestic legislation and the impact on the
financial structure of the economy. In particular, studies
highlight how the discretion allowed by the Directives has been
used to meet the then existing domestic conditions and financial
structure as well as how they have modified that structure.
Countries covered are France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Estonia,
Hungary and Slovenia. The book also contains an overview of
regulatory changes in the UK and Nordic countries, and in
post-crisis USA. This comparative approach raises questions about
whether past and more recent regulatory changes have in fact
contributed to increase financial stability in the EU. The
comparative analysis provided in this book raises questions on
whether the past and more recent changes are contributing to
increase the financial stability and efficiency of individual banks
and national financial systems. The crisis has demonstrated the
drawbacks of formulating the regulatory framework on standards
borrowed from the best industry practices from the large developed
countries, originally designed exclusively for large global banks,
but now applied to all financial institutions.
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