39 episodes

The eabh Podcast. Looking for precedents from the exciting world of financial history. We follow money through time and space. We encourage independent research, encourage open debate and value archives. Follow us on: www.bankinghistory.org
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Finance & History Carmen Hofmann

    • History
    • 5.0 • 4 Ratings

The eabh Podcast. Looking for precedents from the exciting world of financial history. We follow money through time and space. We encourage independent research, encourage open debate and value archives. Follow us on: www.bankinghistory.org
Read less

    Failing Banks

    Failing Banks

    Why do banks fail? What are the characteristics of banks that fail? Are these consistently the same over the course of history? Emil Verner (MIT) says yes, there are some commonalities all US banks that failed in the last 160 years share; moreover he claims that bank failures are quite predictable. Why then don't we prevent most bank failures? Or shouldn't we after all?



    Emil Verner (MIT) in conversation with Carmen Hofmann (eabh)



    The conversation draws on a paper jointly written with Sergio Correia (Federal Reserve System) and Stephan Luck (Federal Reserve Bank of New York).

    • 34 min
    Banking Regulation

    Banking Regulation

    How to regulate banks effectively?

    Alexander Nützenadel (Humboldt University Berlin) makes a case for banking regulation being a cyclical affair. He and his colleagues started out to do the first quantitative analysis of banking supervision in the 20th century. Alexander and Carmen Hofmann (eabh) discuss his findings during what he calls the longest regulatory cycle in history (1930 -1970).



    Are there lessons to be learned for today's regulators ? For instance how to deal with algorithmic trading or passive asset management?



    Tune in to be informed!



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    • 37 min
    Zombie Currency

    Zombie Currency

    In this episode Maylis Avaro (Penn University) and Carmen Hofmann (eabh) discuss the international role of Sterling during the Bretton Woods era. Maylis claims that after 1945, the collective interests of the members of the sterling zone (stability of trade, free flow of capital, freer trade, access to London markets) were little compared to the cost of having UK authorities using the currency as a means of political domination.



    Tune in and listen to a fascinating story of currency, empire & independence!



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    • 29 min
    A Marshall Plan for Ukraine?

    A Marshall Plan for Ukraine?

    Volker Berghahn (Columbia) & Carmen Hofmann (eabh) talk about European reconstruction after World War I, World War II and the Ukrainian War of today. Why was the reconstruction effort after 1945 so much more successful than the endeavours in the interwar years?

    How should global aid be given? Does private or public money serve the matter better? Which should come first? Loans or grants? Do we need peace to rebuild? Who should guarantee for the money given? Who will profit? Volker and Carmen discuss these questions and try to look closely at the roadmap history could provide for Ukrainian reconstruction in the future.



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    • 31 min
    Economic Thought

    Economic Thought

    A practitioner's perspective with Edgar Walk (Metzler Bank) and Carmen Hofmann (eabh).

    How can history insight help to bridge the gap between mathematical economic theory models and the 'real world of finance'? Edgar shares his insights from more than 20 years at one of the world's oldest private banks. How can history serve as a framework to identify financial and political cycles? How can it help to build a framework to see risks clearly and take sound long-term investment decisions? Listen up to get financial history insight!



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    • 31 min
    Credit Crisis

    Credit Crisis

    Stein Berre (New York Fed) & Paul Kosmetatos (University of Edinburgh) talk to Carmen Hofmann (eabh) about the first global credit crisis (1772/73). Which role did innovative financial products play? How did financial contagion propagate the initial shock and in which way did authorities intervene to stabilise markets?

    Interestingly enough, the events 200 years ago resulted in a larger role of central banks within the architecture of finance. These state institutions then used certain stabilisation techniques that are still in place today. What is it that defines their success?

    • 39 min

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