Mayntz | Crisis and Control | Buch | 978-3-593-39671-2 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, Band 75, 299 Seiten, Format (B × H): 146 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 383 g

Reihe: Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung Köln

Mayntz

Crisis and Control

Institutional Change in Financial Market Regulation

Buch, Englisch, Band 75, 299 Seiten, Format (B × H): 146 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 383 g

Reihe: Schriften des Max-Planck-Instituts für Gesellschaftsforschung Köln

ISBN: 978-3-593-39671-2
Verlag: Campus Verlag GmbH


Das Buch präsentiert die Ergebnisse eines 2009 vom MPIfG ins Leben gerufenen Netzwerks von Sozialforschern aus sechs verschiedenen Ländern, die die Veränderungen in der Regulierung von Finanzmärkten in Reaktion auf die internationale Finanzkrise von 2007/2008 untersucht haben. Fünf Kapitel analysieren Veränderungen der Finanzmarktregulierung in wichtigen entwickelten Ländern, sechs weitere Kapitel befassen sich mit den Reformen, die von der Europäischen Union und verschiedenen internationalen Institutionen wie dem Basler Ausschuss und dem Financial Stability Board vorgenommen wurden. Es entsteht ein facettenreiches Bild des von der Finanzkrise auf den verschiedenen politischen Ebenen ausgelösten institutionellen Wandels, seiner treibenden und hemmenden Kräfte und seiner Ergebnisse. Damit leistet das Buch einen wichtigen Beitrag zur Theorie institutionellen Wandels.
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Weitere Infos & Material


Contents

1 Institutional Change in the Regulation of Financial Markets: Questions and Answers
Renate Mayntz

2 The Two-Tiered Politics of Financial Reform in the United States
John T. Woolley and J. Nicholas Ziegler

3 Post-Crisis Financial Regulation in Britain
Sukhdev Johal, Michael Moran and Karel Williams

4 International Radicalism, Domestic Conformism: France's Ambiguous Stance on Financial Reforms
Nicolas Jabko

5 Institutional Change in German Financial Regulation
Stefan Handke and Hubert Zimmermann

6 Increasing Vulnerability: Financial Market Regulation in Switzerland
Simon Steinlin and Christine Trampusch

7 The Regulatory Response of the European Union to the Global Financial Crisis
Lucia Quaglia

8 The Defense of Economic Interests in the European Union: The Case of Hedge Fund Regulation
Cornelia Woll

9 What's the Problem? Competing Diagnoses and Shifting Coalitions in the Reform of International Accounting Standards
Paul Lagneau-Ymonet and Sigrid Quack 6

10 New Capital Rules? Reforming Basel Banking Standards after the Financial Crisis
Roman Goldbach and Dieter Kerwer

11 Institutional Change at the Top: From the Financial Stability Forum to the Financial Stability Board
Shawn Donnelly

12 The International Financial Architecture: Plus ça change …?
Geoffrey R. D. Underhill and Jasper Blom

Contributors

Abbreviations


1
Institutional Change in the Regulation of Financial Markets: Questions and Answers
Renate Mayntz

The formation of a research network

The near-collapse of the international financial system in 2008, with its dire consequences for the real economy and state budgets, has generally been perceived as a major global crisis. Crises command the attention of politicians, experts, and the general public and are expected to trigger responsive action. The financial crisis focused political attention first on measures to contain it-in other words, on crisis management-while economists and social scientists started to analyze its causes. Soon there was wide agreement that one prominent cause had been the failure to regulate the internationally expanded financial markets in such a way that their crisis potential-the "market failure" to which they were prone - would be contained. The existing formal rules had significant gaps and created incentives for circumvention and deviation. Banks had not been required to retain on their books part of certain securities they issued; hedge funds and private equity firms were not required to comply with the capital standards of Basel II; and the over-the-counter (OTC) trade of derivatives did not have to be registered, to name just a few of the regulatory gaps that permitted the financial markets to become bloated with "toxic" assets. In unregulated spaces, new practices developed which contributed to the crisis. This holds for the construction of "innovative" financial instruments, such as structured asset backed securities and credit default swaps. At times the effort to avoid compliance with existing rules led to the invention of innovative forms of circumvention; a prominent example is the creation of special purpose vehicles by banks. The new practices that had developed within the given regulatory framework helped to spread the financial crisis to other sectors and other countries when the bubble based on US subprime mortgages burst. "Market discipline" and efforts at self-regulation had obviously been insufficient to prevent the financial crisis; changing the regu- lation of financial markets therefore appeared the appropriate response.

The observation and analysis of regulatory responses to the crisis was an obvious challenge to sociologists, political scientists, and political economists interested in institutional change. Relevant research started in many places, but clearly no single research institution was able to set up immediately an empirical project covering all aspects of institutional change triggered by the crisis. This also held for the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (Max- Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung or MPIfG), whose research program focuses on markets and on institutional change. The MPIfG therefore decided to provide instead a platform for the formation of a collaborative network of researchers dealing with specific aspects of the process of institutional change triggered by the financial crisis.

The study of institutional change requires specification of its empirical referent. The term "institution" is applied to specific normative regimes, to normatively structured social sub-systems, and even to single organizations such as constitutional courts. Financial markets can also be regarded as institutions. They are based on general norms such as property rights, and are peopled by market actors shaped by and subject to legal norms and collectively agreed standards. However, for the network project we decided not to focus on possible future change in financial markets, but on change in the institutions designed to regulate them. Research into institutional change in respect of financial market regulation addresses the structure and practice of supervision, as well as the formulation of new rules, the amendment of existing laws, and the modification of existing standards taking place at different political levels, from the national to the European and the international.

The first steps of network formation were taken in the fall of 2009. In December 2009, Renate Mayntz invited a number of social scientists known to be engaged in relevant work to join the project. In the same month, Till Kaesbach joined the MPIfG to assist with network coordination, and to collect material to keep abreast of the unfolding reform process. The purpose of the network was to gain insight into features of the many-faceted change process that cannot be obtained in a project covering only one component of the financial and regulatory system: features such as the phase structure of the overall process, the relative dominance of activities at different political levels, or the role played by different types of agents, both supporters and opponents of regulatory change. It is this emphasis on the dynamic and characteristics of the macro-process of institutional change then under way that distinguished the MPIfG enterprise from the multitude of studies devoted to a particular agency, financial instrument, or country. In February 2010, seventeen scholars met for a workshop to discuss the aim, design, and guiding questions of the network enterprise, and to suggest additions to the group. Future network members were to contribute, based on their ongoing research, an account of regulatory reform taking place either in a specific country, at the European level, or with respect to an interna- tional agency, regulatory standard or financial instrument. Institutional change was to be studied not simply as an outcome, but as a process unfolding over time (see Hall 2006).

When network formation started in 2009, the financial crisis had already led to a wide-ranging reform discourse. It did not seem unreasonable at the time to assume that by 2011 the process of institutional change would have reached a stage warranting assessment and analysis. At the workshop in February 2010 network members therefore planned to reassemble in a year to present the re- sults of their studies. By the summer of 2010, the network counted 22 members from six different countries. As planned, the concluding workshops of the net- work took place at the MPIfG in February and March 2011, respectively.

This volume contains a selection of the workshop contributions, nearly all of them in a substantially revised form; revision lasted until September 2011. Not all network members are found among the authors of this book. The aim has been to produce a volume of manageable length, concentrating on events at the three political levels involved in the change process-the national, the European, and the international-and paying more attention to changes in agencies and in rules applied to market actors than in financial instruments. Special emphasis has been put on studies dealing with regulatory change in given countries, for one thing because it turned out that the national level-and in particular the United States and the big European countries-has played and continues to play a dominant role in the regulatory reforms under way globally. This neglects, but does not intend to disavow the importance of the emerging economies to the development of the global financial system-a topic treated in other publications (for example, Underhill/Blom/Mügge 2010). An attempt has been made to have the country chapters answer a common set of questions, but as the network project had not been set up as a comparative study of national responses to be analyzed, for instance, within the framework of the varieties of capitalism approach (VoC), there are considerable differences in the approach, style and implicit normative flavor of these chapters.

The process of change in financial market governance triggered by the financial crisis of 2007/2008 had not fully run its course when, towards the end of 2011, this book went into print. Meanwhile, a second shock wave-the sovereign debt crisis-has overlaid the shock wave of the financial crisis, and the attention of politicians and social scientists alike has shifted to the new crisis. This gives some post-hoc justification to the initial decision to follow institu- tional change in financial market regulation only until 2011, when it could still be connected to the financial crisis of 2007/2008. As analysts of institutional change are well aware, change processes have no objective beginning or end, but are entities defined by those who decide to investigate a given stretch of socio- political development; whatever happens during that period will take on a new meaning if looked at from some later point in time. The open-endedness of the process analyzed in this book inevitably makes its assessment provisional.


Renate Mayntz, Prof. Dr. h.c. mult., war bis zu ihrer Emeritierung 1997 Direktorin am Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung in Köln.


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