ABSTRACT

A stable and sound financial system plays a critical role in mediating funds from surplus units to investors, making it a prerequisite for economic development. Financial intermediaries have been vulnerable to adverse changes in the local and global economy and experienced frequent bubble-and-bust episodes historically. Analyses of financial crises reveal that the incentive created by neo-liberal financial principles is inconsistent with stable financial systems, and viable solutions require structuring institutions in a way that incentives are well aligned with the fundamental principles of financial systems.

By drawing on the theoretical framework of the financial restraint model, this book analyses financial sectors’ rents or bank rents and their effects on banks’ performance and stability, and presents evidence on the relationship between rent and incentive through case studies of both developed and developing countries.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part II|112 pages

Empirical studies

chapter 5|15 pages

China’s non-performing bank loan crisis

The role of economic rents 1

chapter 7|17 pages

Islamic bank rent

Comparison among Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Pakistan

chapter 8|18 pages

Financial sector rents in GCC countries

Are Islamic banks different?

chapter 9|25 pages

Japan’s quantitative easing policy

Implications for bank rents

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion