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This timely book answers complex and perplexing questions raised by Wall Street's role during the recent financial crisis.
Informationen zum Autor Michael A. Santoro is a Professor of Management and Global Business at Rutgers Business School in New Jersey, where he has taught since 1996. Professor Santoro's books include China 2020: How Western Business Can and Should Influence Social and Political Change in the Coming Decade (2010), Ethics and the Pharmaceutical Industry (Cambridge University Press, 2005, co-edited with Thomas M. Gorrie) and Profits and Principles: Global Capitalism and Human Rights in China (2000). A frequent commentator in the mainstream media on business ethics, he holds a JD from New York University School of Law and a PhD in public policy from Harvard University. Klappentext This timely book answers complex and perplexing questions raised by Wall Street's role during the recent financial crisis. Zusammenfassung This timely book answers complex and perplexing questions raised by Wall Street's role in the financial crisis. Wall Street Values chronicles the transformation of Wall Street's business model from serving clients to proprietary trading and explains how this shift undermined the ethical foundations of the modern financial industry. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I. Financial Crisis Background and Theoretical Framework: 1. A financial, governmental, and moral crisis; 2. Does Wall Street have any responsibility to society?: Wall Street and economic prosperity; Part II. Wall Street Business Model, Regulation, and Values in Transition: 3. The gathering storm: government missteps and inattentiveness contribute to the financial crisis; 4. From financial services to proprietary trading: the transformation of Wall Street's business model; 5. Secrets and lies: Goldman Sachs and the death of the honest broker; Part III. Policy Recommendations and Sustainable Values for Wall Street in the Twenty-First Century: 6. Wall Street regulation for the twenty-first century; 7. Wall Street values for the twenty-first century.
Résumé
This timely book answers complex and perplexing questions raised by Wall Street's role in the financial crisis. Wall Street Values chronicles the transformation of Wall Street's business model from serving clients to proprietary trading and explains how this shift undermined the ethical foundations of the modern financial industry.
Contenu
Part I. Financial Crisis Background and Theoretical Framework: 1. A financial, governmental, and moral crisis; 2. Does Wall Street have any responsibility to society?: Wall Street and economic prosperity; Part II. Wall Street Business Model, Regulation, and Values in Transition: 3. The gathering storm: government missteps and inattentiveness contribute to the financial crisis; 4. From financial services to proprietary trading: the transformation of Wall Street's business model; 5. Secrets and lies: Goldman Sachs and the death of the honest broker; Part III. Policy Recommendations and Sustainable Values for Wall Street in the Twenty-First Century: 6. Wall Street regulation for the twenty-first century; 7. Wall Street values for the twenty-first century.