This book analyses the major regulatory developments since the financial crisis, along with sector-specific impacts that have emanated from that generational-defining era. An array of specialists detail developments within their own fields, so that a larger picture of the regulatory framework since the Crisis can be understood.
Daniel Cash is Lecturer at Aston University, UK, and specialises in the regulation of the credit rating industry. He is the Director for Doctoral Studies and developed the West Midlands Legal Doctoral Network.
Robert Goddard is Senior Lecturer at Aston University, UK, specialising in corporate governance, taxation, and company law. He has been Deputy-Dean of the Law School, and leads courses on Fraud, Banking and Financial Regulation, and Taxation.
Part 1: Structural Response 1. 'Three Major Financial Crises: What Have We Learned?' 2. 'The Impact of the Global Financial Crisis upon the UK's Regulatory Architecture' 3. 'Financial Crisis Management under the Twin Peaks Model of Financial Regulation: Australia and the UK Compared' 4. 'Regulatory Capture and the Future of Financial Regulation' Part 2: Tales from the Marketplace 5. 'Regulating Complex Financial Products post-Crisis: Between the STS Regulation and ESMA Product Intervention Powers' 6. 'The Potential Impact of Digitisation upon the Regulation of Financial Markets and Products' 7. 'The Road to Basel III - and Beyond' 8. 'Credit Rating Agency Regulation Since the Financial Crisis: The Evolution of the "Regulatory Licence" Concept' 9. 'Enforcement Strategies in the Chinese Capital Market' 10. 'CRD IV: The EU's Response to Corporate Governance Failings in Credit Institutions' 11. 'Regulating Executive Pay in the post-Crisis Era' 12. 'Consumer Financial Well-being in the post-Crisis era: Financial Education on the Cross-road to Prominence' Conclusion