ECON 222 Chapter Notes - Chapter 17: Shadow Banking System, Maturity Transformation, Financial Contagion

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During the 2008 financial crisis, borrowers were hit by a global credit crunch: they either lost their access to credit or found themselves forced to pay drastically higher interest rates. Deposit-taking banks (regular commercial banks and savings and loans) provide liquidity to savers and directly influence the money supply. Investment banks, which was lehman brothers that fell, are business of speculative trading for its own profit and the profit of its investors. Got too confident = how they fell. Shadow banks are financial institutions (investment banks, hedge funds, or money. Vulnerable to banks runs because they perform maturity transformations, market funds) that were neither closely watched nor effectively regulated transformations of short-term liabilities into long-term assets. The trade-off between rate of return and liquidity. Banks eliminate this by allowing people to have access to their funds while those other funds are away in the form of loans.

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