The UK and Multi-level Financial Regulation: From Post-crisis Reform to Brexit

The UK and Multi-level Financial Regulation:From Post-crisis Reform to Brexit

by: Scott James (Author),Lucia Quaglia(Author)

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Publication Date: 2020/3/6

Language: English

Print Length: 240 pages

ISBN-10: 0198828950

ISBN-13: 9780198828952

Book Description

The UK and Multi-level Financial Regulation examines the role of the United Kingdom (UK) in shaping post-crisis financial regulatory reform, and assesses the implications of the UK's withdrawal from the European Union (EU). It develops a domestic political economy approach to examine how the interaction of three domestic groups - elected officials, financial regulators, and the financial industry - shaped UK preferences, strategy, and influence in inteational and EU-level regulatory negotiations. The framework is applied to five case studies:bank capital and liquidity requirements; bank recovery and resolution rules; bank structural reforms; hedge fund regulation; and the regulation of over-the-counter derivatives. It concludes by reflecting on the future of UK financial regulation after Brexit.The book argues that UK regulators pursued more stringent regulation when they had strong political support to resist financial industry lobbying. UK regulators promoted inteational harmonisation of rules when this protected the competitiveness of industry or enabled cross-border extealities to be managed more effectively; but were often more resistant to new EU rules when these threatened UK interests. Consequently, the UK was more successful at shaping inteational standards by leveraging its market power, regulatory capacity, and alliance building (with the US). But it often met with greater political resistance at the EU level, forcing it to use legal challenges to block reform or secure exemptions. The book concludes that political and regulatory pressure was pivotal in defining the UK's 'hard' Brexit position, and so the future UK-EU relationship in finance will most likely be based on a framework of regulatory equivalence.

About the Author

The UK and Multi-level Financial Regulation examines the role of the United Kingdom (UK) in shaping post-crisis financial regulatory reform, and assesses the implications of the UK's withdrawal from the European Union (EU). It develops a domestic political economy approach to examine how the interaction of three domestic groups - elected officials, financial regulators, and the financial industry - shaped UK preferences, strategy, and influence in inteational and EU-level regulatory negotiations. The framework is applied to five case studies:bank capital and liquidity requirements; bank recovery and resolution rules; bank structural reforms; hedge fund regulation; and the regulation of over-the-counter derivatives. It concludes by reflecting on the future of UK financial regulation after Brexit.The book argues that UK regulators pursued more stringent regulation when they had strong political support to resist financial industry lobbying. UK regulators promoted inteational harmonisation of rules when this protected the competitiveness of industry or enabled cross-border extealities to be managed more effectively; but were often more resistant to new EU rules when these threatened UK interests. Consequently, the UK was more successful at shaping inteational standards by leveraging its market power, regulatory capacity, and alliance building (with the US). But it often met with greater political resistance at the EU level, forcing it to use legal challenges to block reform or secure exemptions. The book concludes that political and regulatory pressure was pivotal in defining the UK's 'hard' Brexit position, and so the future UK-EU relationship in finance will most likely be based on a framework of regulatory equivalence.

代发服务PDF电子书10立即求助
1111
打赏
未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » The UK and Multi-level Financial Regulation: From Post-crisis Reform to Brexit

觉得文章有用就打赏一下文章作者

支付宝扫一扫

微信扫一扫