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Currency, Credit and Crisis: Central Banking in Ireland and Europe

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The global financial crisis in 2008 brought central banking to the centre stage, prompting questions about the role of national central banks and - in Europe - of the multi-country European Central Bank. What can central banks do, and what are their limitations? How have they performed? Currency, Credit and Crisis seeks to provide a coherent perspective on the functions of a central bank in a small country by assessing the way in which Ireland's financial crisis from 2010 to 2013 was handled. Drawing on his experiences as Governor of the Central Bank of Ireland and in research and policy work at the World Bank, Patrick Honohan offers a detailed analytical narrative of the origins of the crisis and of policy makers' conduct during its most fraught moments.

Offers an account of Ireland's boom, bust and recovery from the viewpoint of a central banker

Takes a historical approach to Ireland's financial crisis, noting alternative policy choices that have been made by Ireland in the past and by other countries in similar circumstances

Assesses the proper role of central banks and their relationship with the European Union going forward

Author: Honohan Patrick
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 392
ISBN: 9781108741583
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019

Introduction

Part I. Currency:

1. Fixed or floating

2. Toward the euro

3. The euro area crisis

Part II. Credit:

4. Safe and sound banking

5. Faults in financial services

6. The role of the central bank

Part III. Crisis:

7. The guarantee

8. The race to stabilize the banks

9. The bailout

10. Cleaning-up

Part IV. Taking Stock:

11. The European decade of bank failure

12. The Irish economy in boom and bust

13. Lessons learnt.

Patrick Honohan is Honorary Professor of Economics at Trinity College Dublin, Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a Research Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR).

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