George G. Kaufman and Kenneth E. Scott provide one of the most often cited definitions of systemic risk as “the risk or probability of breakdowns in an entire system, as opposed to breakdowns in individual parts or components, and is evidenced by co-movements (correlations) among most or all parts” (p. 371). They explain how systemic risk arises in the banking sector, then analyze different protections, regulations, and recommendations for reducing it.
What Is Systemic Risk, and Do Bank Regulators Retard or Contribute to It?
Author(s)
George G. Kaufman and Kenneth E. Scott
Publication Date
2003
Publisher
The Independent Review (vol. 7, no. 3)
DOI / URL
Resource Type
Academic Journal Article
Systems Addressed
Economy
Resource Theme
Systemic Risk