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This book focuses on several topical issues related to the
operational risk management in bank: regulation, organisation and
strategy. It analyses the connections between the different
key-players involved in the operational risk process and the most
relevant implications, both operational and strategic, arising from
the implementation of the prudential framework.
This book analyses the connections between the banking industry in
Europe and the companies it finances. Ferretti specifically studies
how these bonds have evolved over time and questions whether now is
the time for a change in the relationship's dynamics. Chapters
discuss the role of bank lending in firms' financing during the
recent financial crisis, as well as issues in credit risk
management. The discussion also examines regulatory requirements
impacting banks and firms (Basel III) and how they intersect with
banks' internal purposes. Moreover, the book explores how the
financial crisis has impacted the relationship between banks and
businesses, and seeks to identify the strengths and weaknesses
inherent to it. Through this timely discussion, Ferretti looks to
the future of the relationship between banks and non-financial
organizations to see how they can be revitalised, adapted and
reimagined in a post-crisis economy.
This book provides the foundational knowledge essential for
comprehending the functioning of financial markets and institutions
and their current challenges. First, the book provides a general
overview on the functioning of the EU financial system, examining
financial markets and financial intermediaries’ features and
activity and their contribution to economic growth. It also
outlines the evolution of the EU integration process, giving an
overview of the most important regulatory steps related to the
banking and financial system culminated in the creation of the
Banking Union. Banking activity is also examined in the most
important business areas: commercial versus investment banking.
Lastly, the book introduces two important phenomena, which are
currently characterizing the financial environment: FinTech and
sustainable finance. Both FinTech and sustainable finance represent
significant opportunities for the market and the operators, even if
the challenges and risks associated are also relevant. This
underlines the need to understand their intensity and their
potential impact on the functioning of the financial system as a
whole.
Public debates in our societies are marked by appeals to tradition,
religion and even manipulative uses of 'post-truth'. This book
argues that the antidote to such tendencies can only be public
reasoning. We can find the resources to build what I call the
public perspective if we make two commitments: to respect people as
free autonomous agents and to endorse a shared ethics of beliefs.
An ethics of belief is a set of epistemic and moral rules that
inform the beliefs that we bring to the public forum and make
possible discussion and confrontation on a terrain that is
adequately public. The epistemological aspects cannot be severed
from the political commitments that motivate public justification
in the first place. An ethics of belief shields us against two
temptations: on the one hand, to abandon reason and claim that all
sorts of beliefs and opinion should weigh into public reasoning;
or, on the other, to appeal to objective reasons only,
independently of whether people recognise them as such or not.
From the spread of kleptocracy in Venezuela at the expense of the
country's economy, to President Trump's appointment of family
members to high-ranking White House positions, to President
Lukashenko's desperate stranglehold on power in Belarus, across the
world political corruption is rampant-indeed practically too
ubiquitous to keep track of. As these examples illustrate,
political corruption is often associated to a variety of instances
of abuse of power that either derive from a vicious trait of
individual character, or develop within deeply dysfunctional
institutions. To Emanuela Ceva and Maria Paola Ferretti, however,
this piecemeal view is inadequate: individual and institutional
instances of political corruption have a common root that we can
understand only by treating corruption and anticorruption as a
matter of a public ethics of office. Political corruption is the
Trojan horse that undermines public institutions from within via an
interrelated action of officeholders. Even well-designed and
legitimate institutions can veer off track if the officeholders
fail through their conduct to uphold a public ethics of office
accountability. This book offers an analytically rigorous
definition of political corruption. It also investigates the common
normative root of its two manifestations-corrupt individual
character, and corrupt institutional mechanisms-as a relationally
wrongful practice that consists of an unaccountable use of the
power of office by officeholders in public institutions. From this
perspective, political corruption must be understood from within,
for it is an internal enemy of public institutions that can only be
opposed by mobilizing the officeholders to remain accountable and
mutually answerable for their conduct. In this way, anticorruption
calls on the officeholders' responsibility to work together to
maintain an interactively just institutional system.
This book analyses the connections between the banking industry in
Europe and the companies it finances. Ferretti specifically studies
how these bonds have evolved over time and questions whether now is
the time for a change in the relationship's dynamics. Chapters
discuss the role of bank lending in firms' financing during the
recent financial crisis, as well as issues in credit risk
management. The discussion also examines regulatory requirements
impacting banks and firms (Basel III) and how they intersect with
banks' internal purposes. Moreover, the book explores how the
financial crisis has impacted the relationship between banks and
businesses, and seeks to identify the strengths and weaknesses
inherent to it. Through this timely discussion, Ferretti looks to
the future of the relationship between banks and non-financial
organizations to see how they can be revitalised, adapted and
reimagined in a post-crisis economy.
Public debates in our societies are marked by appeals to tradition,
religion and even manipulative uses of 'post-truth'. This book
argues that the antidote to such tendencies can only be public
reasoning. We can find the resources to build what I call the
public perspective if we make two commitments: to respect people as
free autonomous agents and to endorse a shared ethics of beliefs.
An ethics of belief is a set of epistemic and moral rules that
inform the beliefs that we bring to the public forum and make
possible discussion and confrontation on a terrain that is
adequately public. The epistemological aspects cannot be severed
from the political commitments that motivate public justification
in the first place. An ethics of belief shields us against two
temptations: on the one hand, to abandon reason and claim that all
sorts of beliefs and opinion should weigh into public reasoning;
or, on the other, to appeal to objective reasons only,
independently of whether people recognise them as such or not.
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