ABSTRACT

Shadow banking – a system of credit creation outside traditional banks – lies at the very heart of the global economy. It accounts for over half of global banking assets, and represents a third of the global financial system. Although the term ‘shadow banking’ only entered public discourse in 2007, the importance and scope of this system is now widely recognised by the international policy-makers. There is, however, much less consensus on the origins of the shadow banking system, what role it plays in global political economy and the optimal approach to regulating this complex segment of finance. This volume addresses these questions.

Shadow Banking is the first study to bring together the insights from financial regulators, practitioners and academics from across the social sciences. The first part traces the evolution and ongoing confusion about the meaning of ‘shadow banking’. The second section draws major lessons about shadow banking as posed by the financial crisis of 2007–09, providing comparative analyses in the US and Europe, and attempts to establish why shadow banking has emerged and matured to the level of a de facto parallel financial system. Finally, the third part goes beyond current regulatory concerns about shadow banking and explains why it is ‘here to stay’.

This volume is of great importance to political economy, banking and international political economy.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Shadow banking

part I|87 pages

Scoping the shadow banking system

chapter 1|6 pages

Shadow banking

A view from the USA

chapter 2|15 pages

The transformation of banking

chapter 3|14 pages

How shadow banking became non-bank finance

The conjectural power of economic ideas

chapter 5|15 pages

Shadow banking in China

Instruments, issues, trends

part II|73 pages

Crisis and beyond

chapter 7|15 pages

The shadow banking system during the financial crisis of 2007–08

A comparison of the US and the EU

chapter 8|21 pages

European money market funds

A study of the market micro-processes 1

chapter 9|20 pages

Shadow connections

On hierarchies of collateral in shadow banking

part III|65 pages

Banking on the future

chapter 12|12 pages

The future for the top 0.1 per cent

The real role of hedge funds in the subprime crisis

chapter 13|15 pages

The economy of deferral and displacement

Finance, shadow banking and fiscal arbitrage

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

Shadow banking