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The economics of large-value payments and settlement : theory and policy issues for central banks / edited by Mark Manning, Erlend Nier and Jochen Schanz.
Lippincott Library HG1811 .E26 2009
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Banks and banking, Central.
- Payment.
- Physical Description:
- xix, 222 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Oxford : Oxford University Press, [2009]
- Summary:
- Central banks have over the past few years devoted considerable resources to the study of the economics of payments. In parallel, this field has begun to establish itself as a new subject for scholarly research, drawing in academic students and researchers. To date, there has been little attempt to draw together the key insights gained from this growing body of research.
- This volume seeks to offer just such a synthesis. It charts the frontier of our knowledge to date and puts it in the context of a comprehensive overview of the policy issues faced by central banks in this sphere. In particular, it explores: central banks' roles in payment systems; the risks on which central banks focus in their oversight activities; and the challenges central banks face as the payments and settlement landscape evolves.
- The economics of payments is a multi-disciplinary field, taking in branches of economics such as monetary theory, search theory, game theory, and industrial organization. It also draws on techniques from network theory and makes extensive use of simulation studies to model complex interactions between payment system members. For each of the topics covered, this volume highlights some of the most influential works in the literature. The book also draws heavily on empirical insights, in particular offering an historical context to central banks' involvement in payment systems.
- Contents:
- Introduction 1
- 1 Money, banking and payments: historical evolution and the role of the central bank 2
- 2 Sources of systemic risk in payments and settlement 5
- 3 Governance and regulation of payment and settlement systems 9
- 4 Future policy challenges for central banks 11
- Part I Money, banking and payments: historical evolution and the role of the central bank 15
- 1 The foundations of money and payments 17
- 1.1 The origins of money and payments 17
- 1.2 The emergence of banks, including the early central banks 22
- 2 Payments and monetary and financial stability 30
- 2.1 Central-bank money as the ultimate settlement asset 31 3 2.2 Payments and monetary stability 32
- 2.3 Payments and financial stability 34
- 2.4 The value of payment systems to the real economy 36
- 2.5 The broadening and deepening of financial market infrastructure and implications for central banks' financial stability objectives 41
- Part II Sources of systemic risk in payment and settlement systems 47
- 3 System design and sources of credit risk in large-value payment and settlement systems 51
- 3.1 Deferred net settlement in large-value payment systems 51
- 3.2 Managing credit risk in DNS systems 58
- 3.3 Real-time gross settlement in large-value payment systems 62
- 3.4 The choice of settlement model: drivers of the widespread adoption of RTGS in large-value payment systems 64
- 4 Liquidity risk in large-value payment systems 68
- 4.1 Liquidity and the incentive to delay payments 69
- 4.2 Central banks' provision of liquidity in payment systems: the theory 79
- 4.3 Central banks' intraday credit policies in practice 84
- 4.4 Reducing the opportunity cost of collateralized intraday credit 88
- 4.5 Mechanisms to promote efficient recycling of liquidity 90
- 4.6 Hybrid payment-system design 91
- 4.7 Optimal channelling of payments 98
- 5 Managing systemic risk in the clearance and settlement of foreign-exchange, securities and derivatives transactions 102
- 5.1 Foreign-exchange settlement risk 103
- 5.2 Settlement risk in securities settlement systems 108
- 5.3 Management of replacement risk in clearinghouses 113
- 6 Other sources of systemic risk: operational and business risk 122
- 6.1 Operational risk 122
- 6.2 Business risk 134
- Part III Public-policy intervention in payment and settlement systems 137
- 7 Market failures in payment and settlement systems 139
- 7.1 Market failures: implications for systemic risk 139
- 7.2 Market failures: implications for efficiency 141
- 8 Ownership, governance and regulation of payment systems 143
- 8.1 Public ownership and subsidization of payment systems 144
- 8.2 Targeted intervention ('oversight') 147
- 8.3 Mutual ownership and integration of external stakeholders 149
- 8.4 Which authority should intervene? 155
- 9 Central-bank oversight of payment and settlement systems in practice 158
- 9.1 Oversight objectives 158
- 9.2 Implementation of oversight 161
- Part IV Future policy challenges for central banks 167
- 10 Banks providing infrastructure services 169
- 10.1 The provision of wholesale payments services 170
- 10.2 Risks in tiered structures 178
- 10.3 Other firms providing payment and settlement infrastructure 184
- 11 The evolving infrastructure landscape and challenges for central banks 187
- 11.1 Forces for change in the infrastructure landscape 187
- 11.2 Implications for financial stability and central bank oversight 196
- 11.3 Implications for the implementation of monetary policy 199
- 11.4 Directions for future research in large-value payment systems 201.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 9780199571116
- 0199571112
- OCLC:
- 313664545
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