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Banking Regulation of UK and US Financial Markets
Ashgate Publishing, Oct 2007, Pages: 238
Dalvinder Singh provides an interdisciplinary analysis of the legal aspects of prudential supervision of financial bank conglomerates, providing the reader with a broader understanding of the core processes of banking supervision. Using the UK as a case study, Singh makes a comparison with the US to illustrate the different ways of regulating a 'deregulated market'.
The author examines the theoretical, economic, political and policy issues that underpin the purpose of prudential supervision and its important features, such as corporate governance, enforcement sanctions, the role of external auditors and accountability of financial regulators.
This book will be of interest to academics, policymakers, regulators and practitioners, and will also serve specialist undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in law, management and economics which focus on financial regulation.
Reviews
'Dr. Singh provides the best comparative (UK-US) and interdisciplinary treatment to date of the increasingly complex and globally important topic of prudential supervision of financial bank conglomerates. An invaluable and insightful resource for all practitioners, financial institution executives, policymakers and academics interested in this area.' Joseph J. Norton, University of London (1993-2005).
'Invaluable reading for students in banking and finance who need a clear explanatory map of the legal and regulatory picture for banks in the US and UK. This book makes some interesting comparative analyses too.' Joanna Gray, Newcastle University , UK
'This book should be essential reading for all those with an interest in banking regulation. The author provides an in-depth but highly readable examination of all the major issues.' Andrew Campbell, University of Leeds, UK
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