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Banks and bed debts

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York; John Wiley and Sons; 1995Description: 201 pISBN:
  • 471953172
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 332.1 BAN
Summary: Bad debts are by far the most common cause of bank failure. In recent years international banks have suffered very large losses due to the non–repayment of loans, or because of provisions against non–repayment, and the size of these losses has at times posed a serious threat to financial stability. This book provides a self–contained, authoritative and coherent treatment of the issue of loan loss provisioning by banks in an international context. The authors examine the issue from a number of different perspectives — accounting, regulatory, taxation, finance and economic — and demonstrate that there are wide national differences in the accounting treatment of bank loan losses. These inconsistencies lead to competitive distortions, as well as supervisory problems and potential macro–economic instability. The authors conclude that there is an urgent need for the harmonisation of national accounting standards in this hitherto neglected area of banking behaviour. The book features a unique compendium, provided by Price Waterhouse, of up–to–date information describing the accounting and regulatory treatment of impaired loans in 14 major countries. This will be an invaluable source of practical information for bank auditors, lending officers, compliance officers, treasurers, financial analysts, and bank supervisors. The authors are academic specialists in accounting and finance, and have undertaken extensive consultancy in this area.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Gandhi Smriti Library 332.1 BAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 82346
Total holds: 0

Bad debts are by far the most common cause of bank failure. In recent years international banks have suffered very large losses due to the non–repayment of loans, or because of provisions against non–repayment, and the size of these losses has at times posed a serious threat to financial stability. This book provides a self–contained, authoritative and coherent treatment of the issue of loan loss provisioning by banks in an international context. The authors examine the issue from a number of different perspectives — accounting, regulatory, taxation, finance and economic — and demonstrate that there are wide national differences in the accounting treatment of bank loan losses. These inconsistencies lead to competitive distortions, as well as supervisory problems and potential macro–economic instability. The authors conclude that there is an urgent need for the harmonisation of national accounting standards in this hitherto neglected area of banking behaviour. The book features a unique compendium, provided by Price Waterhouse, of up–to–date information describing the accounting and regulatory treatment of impaired loans in 14 major countries. This will be an invaluable source of practical information for bank auditors, lending officers, compliance officers, treasurers, financial analysts, and bank supervisors. The authors are academic specialists in accounting and finance, and have undertaken extensive consultancy in this area.

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