ABSTRACT

Setting forth the building blocks of banking bailout law, this book reconstructs a regulatory framework that might better serve countries during future crisis situations.

It builds upon recent, carefully selected case studies from the US, the EU, the UK, Spain and Hungary to answer the questions of what went wrong with the bank bailouts in the EU, why the US performed better in terms of crisis management, and how bailouts could be regulated and conducted more successfully in the future. Employing a comparative methodology, it examines the different bailout and bank resolution techniques and tools and identifies the pros and cons of the different legal and regulatory options and their underlying principles. In the post-2008 legal-regulatory architecture financial institution specific insolvency proceedings were further developed or implemented on both sides of the Atlantic. Ten years after the most recent financial crisis, there is sufficient empirical evidence to evaluate the outcomes of the bank bailouts in the US and the EU and to examine a number of cases under the EU’s new bank resolution regime.

This book will be of interest of anyone in the field of finance, banking, central banking, monetary policy and insolvency law.

part |7 pages

Introduction

part 1|79 pages

Comparative analysis and systematization of bank bailouts in the selected jurisdictions

part 2|88 pages

The current legal–regulatory framework of bank bailouts

part 3|24 pages

The building blocks of banking bailout law

part |7 pages

Conclusion