Written for the motivated non-specialist, this fully revised and updated edition of The Financial Crisis and Federal Reserve Policy provides the most accurate and thorough coverage available of the causes and consequences of the 2008 Financial Crisis, examining the role the Federal Reserve played in preventing a major economic meltdown on par with the Great Depression.
This bestselling work has been retooled from the ground up to include three new chapters on post-Crisis recovery efforts, European sovereign debt, and recently-enacted financial regulations, in addition to updated tables and figures containing the most recent data emerging out of the crisis. After the burst of the credit and housing bubbles in 2008, the Great Recession that followed deprived more than 8 million Americans of their jobs and triggered a per capita loss of income of more than $6,000. Thomas provides readers with a clear and comprehensive explanation of the myriad forces that combined to create the bubbles that were the source of the economic contraction. He retraces the chain reaction that took place as these bubbles deflated, and opens a window into the channels through which the crisis spilled over to produce a recession.
Author(s): Lloyd B. Thomas
Edition: Second Edition, Revised
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2014
Language: English
Pages: xx+270
1 Financial Crises: An Overview
2 The Nature of Banking Crises
3 The Panic of 1907 and the Savings and Loan Crisis
4 Development of the Housing and Credit Bubbles
5 Bursting of the Twin Bubbles
6 The Great Crisis and Great Recession of 2007–2009
7 Aftermath of the Great Recession: The Anemic Recovery
8 The European Sovereign Debt Crisis
9 The Framework of Federal Reserve Monetary Control
10 Federal Reserve Policy in the Great Depression
11 The Federal Reserve’s Response to the Great Crisis: 2007–2009
12 Unconventional Monetary Policy Initiatives: 2008–2013
13 The Federal Reserve’s Exit Strategy and the Threat of Inflation
14 The Need for Regulatory Reform