
The Political Economy of Bank Regulation in Developing Countries: Risk and Reputation
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Content
- Part I: Introduction, cross-country variation, and analytical argument
- 1: Emily Jones: The puzzle: peripheral developing countries implementing international banking standards
- 2: Emily Jones: The challenges international banking standards pose for peripheral developing countries
- 3: Emily Jones: The politics of regulatory convergence and divergence
- Part II: Case studies
- 4: Natalya Naqvi: Pakistan: Politicians, regulations, and banks advocate Basel
- 5: Pritish Behuria: Rwanda: Running without legs
- 6: Emily Jones: Ghana: Reformist politicians drive Basel implementation
- 7: Ousseni Illy and Seydou Ouedraogo: West African Economic and Monetary Union: Central bankers drive Basel under IMF pressure
- 8: Hazel Gray: Tanzania: From institutional hiatus to the return of policy-based lending
- 9: Radha Upadhyaya: Kenya: 'Dubai' in the Savannah
- 10: Peter Knaack: Bolivia: Pulling in two directions - the developmental state and Basel standards
- 11: Florence Dafe: Nigeria: Catch 22 - navigating Basel standards in Nigeria's fragile banking sector
- 12: Rebecca Engebretsen and Ricardo Soares de Oliveira: Angola: "For the English to see"
- 13: Que-Giang Tran-Thi and Tu-Anh Vu Thanh: Vietnam: The dilemma of bringing global financial standards to a socialist market economy
- 14: Toni Weis: Ethiopia: Raising a vegetarian tiger?
- Part III: Conclusion
- 15: Emily Jones: Conclusion: Key findings and policy recommendations
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