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Banks, Consumers and Regulation

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Banks, Consumers and Regulation
By
Peter Cartwright
Description
Recent developments in law, public
policy, and regulation have ensured that questions regarding the
relationship between banks and their customers have seldom been out
of the spotlight. This important book provides a timely, original,
and critical examination of the role of the law in regulating banks
in the interests of the consumer. The work examines the social and
economic rationales for, and the objectives of banking regulation. In
so doing, it focuses on the crucial role of regulation in the
protection of the consumer. The book then provides a critical
appraisal of the principal techniques by which regulation is
delivered and protection ensured. Such techniques include prior
approval by licensing, continued supervision, and information
remedies such as disclosure. The work also looks at how the law
protects depositors of insolvent banks through financial compensation
schemes, and how it provides consumer redress through mechanisms for
ensuring access to justice, in particular ombudsmen. Finally, the
book looks at the topical question of consumer access to banking
services, and considers the extent to which the law can justify
placing social obligations on banks in the consumer interest. This is
the first monograph to examine these important topics in this way.
Peter Cartwright is a Professor of
Consumer Protection Law at the University of Nottingham.
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