Achieving Financial Stability and Growth in Africa

Author:   Stephany Griffith-Jones (Columbia University, USA) ,  Ricardo Gottschalk (Middlesex Univeristy, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138123731


Pages:   186
Publication Date:   24 March 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Achieving Financial Stability and Growth in Africa


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Author:   Stephany Griffith-Jones (Columbia University, USA) ,  Ricardo Gottschalk (Middlesex Univeristy, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9781138123731


ISBN 10:   1138123730
Pages:   186
Publication Date:   24 March 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. A financial sector to support development in low income countries Stephany Griffith-Jones with Ewa Karwowski and Florence Dafe 2. Financial regulation, stability and growth in low-income countries: a review of the evidence and agenda for research Stephen Spratt 3. Literature survey on capital account management in low-income countries Isabella Massa 4. Assessing Capacity Constraints for Effective Financial Regulation in SSA Ricardo Gottschalk 5. Financial Regulation in Kenya: Balancing Inclusive Growth with Financial Stability Francis M. Mwega 6. Financial regulation in Ghana: balancing inclusive growth with financial stability Charles Ackah and Johnson P. Asiamah 7. Financial regulation in Lics: balancing inclusive growth with financial stability – the Nigerian case Olu Ajakaiye and Sheriffdeen Tella 8. Financial Inclusion, Regulation and Inclusive Growth in Ethiopia Getnet Alemu 9. Conclusions Stephany Griffith-Jones, Ricardo Gottschalk and Stephan Spratt

Reviews

'Ahead of the 2008 crisis many economists assumed that financial deepening - including increased private credit as a percent of GDP - was always positive for economic growth. We now know that there can be too much finance and too much private credit. But good finance is still crucial to economic development, and low-income countries must use the lessons of the global financial crisis to help identify which forms of financial development are most beneficial. This book will play an important role in that debate, combining sound empirical analysis, informative case studies, and thoughtful synthesis of the overall insights and implications.' - Adair Turner, former chair of UK Financial Services Authority and author of Between Debt and the Devil 'This is a compelling factual study about a critical dilemma for policy making in LICs - delicately balancing the trinity of financial inclusion, financial stability and growth agendas. This is even more challenging in the face of globalisation, inadequacies within domestic jurisdictions, ongoing reforms to global regulatory architecture and new rules like Anti Money Laundering that pose unintended consequences.' - Louis Kasekende (PhD.), Deputy Governor Bank of Uganda


'Ahead of the 2008 crisis many economists assumed that financial deepening - including increased private credit as a percent of GDP - was always positive for economic growth. We now know that there can be too much finance and too much private credit. But good finance is still crucial to economic development, and low- income countries must use the lessons of the global financial crisis to help identify which forms of financial development are most beneficial. This book will play an important role in that debate, combining sound empirical analysis, informative case studies and thoughtful synthesis of the overall insights and implications.' - Adair Turner, former chair of the UK Financial Services Authority and author of Between Debt and the Devil 'This is a compelling factual study about a critical dilemma for policy making in LICs - delicately balancing the trinity of financial inclusion, financial stability and growth agendas. This is even more challenging in the face of globalisation, inadequacies within domestic jurisdictions, ongoing reforms to global regulatory architecture and new rules like Anti Money Laundering that pose unintended consequences.' - Louis Kasekende PhD, Deputy Governor, Bank of Uganda 'This book is very timely - we know that for many low income countries financial regulation is at a crossroads, as policy makers strive to find a promising way forward, after the global financial crisis (2007-8). Of course, some recent studies have tried to re-examine financial regulation post-2008. But this book is exceptional: it offers a nice twist, 'financial regulation for stability and growth'; it is meticulously researched, under an ESRC-DFID funded project on bank regulation, led by Stephany Griffith-Jones and involving other leading scholars in the field, who have deep appreciation for policy and practice. Moreover, the book presents a uniquely rich body of findings from four case studies, on Ghana, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Kenya, written by country scholars (e.g. the case on Kenya by Francis Mwega is a prize winner). The case study findings will ring bells with researchers and resonate with policy advisers and policy makers at central banks in Africa. Overall, I strongly endorse this outstanding book, which will strike a chord with many African central bank governors, on the question of financial regulation for stability!' - Professor Victor Murinde, University of Birmingham, UK


'Packs a lot in 186 pages, is essential reading for specialists, and an excellent source of reference that should be on every central bank library shelf. - John Chown, Central Banking Journal 'Ahead of the 2008 crisis many economists assumed that financial deepening - including increased private credit as a percent of GDP - was always positive for economic growth. We now know that there can be too much finance and too much private credit. But good finance is still crucial to economic development, and low- income countries must use the lessons of the global financial crisis to help identify which forms of financial development are most beneficial. This book will play an important role in that debate, combining sound empirical analysis, informative case studies and thoughtful synthesis of the overall insights and implications.' - Adair Turner, former chair of the UK Financial Services Authority and author of Between Debt and the Devil 'This is a compelling factual study about a critical dilemma for policy making in LICs - delicately balancing the trinity of financial inclusion, financial stability and growth agendas. This is even more challenging in the face of globalisation, inadequacies within domestic jurisdictions, ongoing reforms to global regulatory architecture and new rules like Anti Money Laundering that pose unintended consequences.' - Louis Kasekende PhD, Deputy Governor, Bank of Uganda 'This book is very timely - we know that for many low income countries financial regulation is at a crossroads, as policy makers strive to find a promising way forward, after the global financial crisis (2007-8). Of course, some recent studies have tried to re-examine financial regulation post-2008. But this book is exceptional: it offers a nice twist, 'financial regulation for stability and growth'; it is meticulously researched, under an ESRC-DFID funded project on bank regulation, led by Stephany Griffith-Jones and involving other leading scholars in the field, who have deep appreciation for policy and practice. Moreover, the book presents a uniquely rich body of findings from four case studies, on Ghana, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Kenya, written by country scholars (e.g. the case on Kenya by Francis Mwega is a prize winner). The case study findings will ring bells with researchers and resonate with policy advisers and policy makers at central banks in Africa. Overall, I strongly endorse this outstanding book, which will strike a chord with many African central bank governors, on the question of financial regulation for stability!' - Professor Victor Murinde, University of Birmingham, UK This interesting book has both superb qualities and surprising omissions, discussing an important and highly topical subject. (...) [It] offers a comprehensive review of previous academic literature, and is based on a three-year international project. (...) [It] is essential reading for specialists and an excellent source of reference that should be on every central bank library shelf. - John Chown


'Packs a lot in 186 pages, is essential reading for specialists, and an excellent source of reference that should be on every central bank library shelf. - John Chown, Central Banking Journal `Ahead of the 2008 crisis many economists assumed that financial deepening - including ã increased private credit as a percent of GDP - was always positive for economic ã growth. We now know that there can be too much finance and too much private credit. But good finance is still crucial to economic development, and low- income countries must use the lessons of the global financial crisis to help identify which forms of financial development are most beneficial.ã This book will play an important role in that debate, combining sound empirical analysis, informative case studies and thoughtful synthesis of the overall insights and implications.' - Adair Turner, former chair of the UK Financial Services Authority and author of Between Debt and the Devil `This is a compelling factual study about a critical dilemma for policy making in LICs - delicately balancing the trinity of financial inclusion, financial stability and growth agendas. This is even more challenging in the face of globalisation, inadequacies within domestic jurisdictions, ongoing reforms to global regulatory architecture and new rules like Anti Money Laundering that pose unintended consequences.' - Louis Kasekende PhD, Deputy Governor, Bank of Uganda `This book is very timely - we know that for many low income countries financial regulation is at a crossroads, as policy makers strive to find a promising way forward, after the global financial crisis (2007-8). Of course, some recent studies have tried to re-examine financial regulation post-2008. But this book is exceptional: it offers a nice twist, `financial regulation for stability and growth'; it is meticulously researched, under an ESRC-DFID funded project on bank regulation, led by Stephany Griffith-Jones and involving other leading scholars in the field, who have deep appreciation for policy and practice. Moreover, the book presents a uniquely rich body of findings from fourã case studies, on Ghana, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Kenya, written by country scholars (e.g. the case on Kenya by Francis Mwega is a prize winner). The case study findings will ring bells with researchers and resonate with policy advisers and policy makers at central banks in Africa. Overall, I strongly endorse this outstanding book, which will strike a chord with many African central bank governors, on the question of financial regulation for stability!' - Professor Victor Murinde, University of Birmingham, UK This interesting book has both superb qualities and surprising omissions, discussing an important and highly topical subject. (...) [It] offers a comprehensive review of previous academic literature, and is based on a three-year international project. (...) [It] is essential reading for specialists and an excellent source of reference that should be on every central bank library shelf. - John Chown


Author Information

Stephany Griffith-Jones is Associate Fellow at ODI, Financial Markets Director at IPD, Columbia University and Emeritus at IDS, Sussex, where she was Professorial Fellow for a long time. Ricardo Gottschalk is an Economic Affairs Officer at the Division of Globalization and Development Strategies (GDS) of UNCTAD, Geneva, Switzerland.

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