
단행본
The Illusion of Control: Why Financial Crises Happen, and What We Can (and Can't) Do about It
- 발행사항
- New Haven : Yale University Press, 2022
- 형태사항
- vii, 276 pages : illustrations ; 24cm
- 서지주기
- 참고문헌(p.259-265) 및 색인 수록
소장정보
위치 | 등록번호 | 청구기호 / 출력 | 상태 | 반납예정일 |
---|---|---|---|---|
이용 가능 (1) | ||||
자료실 | E208072 | 대출가능 | - |
이용 가능 (1)
- 등록번호
- E208072
- 상태/반납예정일
- 대출가능
- -
- 위치/청구기호(출력)
- 자료실
책 소개
A challenge to the conventional wisdom surrounding financial risk, providing insight into why easy solutions to control the financial system are doomed to fail
Finance plays a key role in the prosperity of the modern world, but it also brings grave dangers. We seek to manage those threats with a vast array of sophisticated mathematical tools and techniques of financial risk management. Too often, though, we fail to address the greatest risk—the peril posed by our own behavior.
Jón Daníelsson argues that critical risk is generated from within, through the interactions of individuals and perpetuated by their beliefs, objectives, abilities, and prejudices. He asserts that the widespread belief that risk originates outside the financial system frustrates our ability to measure and manage it, and the likely consequences of new regulations will help alleviate small-scale risks but, perversely, encourage excessive risk taking. Daníelsson uses lessons from past and recent crises to show that diversity is the best way to safeguard our financial system.
A challenge to the conventional wisdom surrounding financial risk, providing insight into why easy solutions to control the financial system are doomed to fail
Finance plays a key role in the prosperity of the modern world, but it also brings grave dangers. We seek to manage those threats with a vast array of sophisticated mathematical tools and techniques of financial risk management. Too often, though, we fail to address the greatest risk—the peril posed by our own behavior.
Jón Daníelsson argues that critical risk is generated from within, through the interactions of individuals and perpetuated by their beliefs, objectives, abilities, and prejudices. He asserts that the widespread belief that risk originates outside the financial system frustrates our ability to measure and manage it, and the likely consequences of new regulations will help alleviate small-scale risks but, perversely, encourage excessive risk taking. Daníelsson uses lessons from past and recent crises to show that diversity is the best way to safeguard our financial system.
A challenge to the conventional wisdom surrounding financial risk, providing insight into why easy solutions to control the financial system are doomed to fail
목차
Acknowledgments
1. Riding the tiger
2. Systemic risk
3. Groundhog day
4. The risk panopticon
5. The myth of the riskometer
6. Ideas matter: Risk and uncertainty
7. Endogenous risk
8. If you can't take the risk, change riskometers
9. The goldilocks challenge
10. The risk theater
11. The uniformity, efficiency, and stability trilemma
12. All about BoB: Robots and the future of risk
13. The path not to take
14. What to do?
Notes
Bibliography
Index