Isabel Schnabel
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German economist
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Economics
Why Is Isabel Schnabel Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Isabel Schnabel is a German economist who has been serving as a member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank since 2020. She became professor of financial economics at the University of Bonn in 2015 and a member of the German Council of Economic Experts in 2014. She worked previously at the University of Mainz from 2007 to 2015.
Isabel Schnabel's Published Works
Published Works
- Competition, Risk-Shifting, and Public Bail-Out Policies (2007) (358)
- Reconciling risk sharing with market discipline: A constructive approach to euro area reform (2018) (232)
- Bank Size and Risk-Taking Under Basel II (2005) (182)
- Liquidity and Contagion: The Crisis of 1763 (2004) (154)
- Moral Hazard and International Crisis Lending: A Test (2002) (130)
- Bubbles and Central Banks: Historical Perspectives (2015) (123)
- Banks without parachutes: Competitive effects of government bail-out policies (2010) (112)
- The German Twin Crisis of 1931 (2004) (111)
- Capital regulation, bank competition, and financial stability (2011) (85)
- Credit Risk Transfer and Bank Competition (2009) (70)
- Financial integration and growth — Why is Emerging Europe different? (2013) (70)
- Bail-In Expectations for European Banks: Actions Speak Louder than Words (2016) (65)
- Bank Bonuses and Bail-Outs (2012) (64)
- How Do Official Bailouts Affect the Risk of Investing in Emerging Markets? (2006) (62)
- The Role of Liquidity and Implicit Guarantees in the German Twin Crisis of 1931 (2005) (61)
- Financial Sector Reform after the Subprime Crisis: Has Anything Happened? (2016) (59)
- Why Banks are Not Too Big to Fail: Evidence from the CDS Market (2013) (56)
- Asset Price Bubbles and Systemic Risk (2017) (47)
- Banks Without Parachutes - Competitive Effects of Government Bail-Out Policies (2004) (45)
- Public Ownership of Banks and Economic Growth (2011) (44)
- When markets fail – the need for collective action in tackling climate change (2020) (36)
- The Threat of Capital Drain: A Rationale for Public Banks? (2006) (34)
- Money and Trust: Lessons from the 1620s for Money in the Digital Age (2018) (30)
- Family and Gender Still Matter: The Heterogeneity of Returns To Education in Germany (2002) (28)
- Public Ownership of Banks and Economic Growth – The Role of Heterogeneity (2010) (27)
- The Privatization of Italian Savings Banks - A Role Model for Germany?* (2005) (27)
- Abolishing Public Guarantees in the Absence of Market Discipline (2013) (24)
- Financial Sector Reform after the Crisis: Has Anything Happened? (2013) (24)
- Regulatory Capture by Sophistication (2014) (24)
- The Threat of Capital Drain: A Rationale for Regional Public Banks? (2010) (23)
- Foreshadowing LTCM: the crisis of 1763 (2001) (20)
- Regulatory Complexity and the Quest for Robust Regulation (2019) (19)
- Financial Integration and Growth - Is Emerging Europe Different? (2010) (15)
- The great transformation: From government-owned to foreign-controlled banking sectors (2011) (14)
- Bank Resolution Regimes and Systemic Risk (2020) (13)
- Bank Competition and Capital Regulation (2007) (11)
- Going negative: the ECB’s experience (2020) (11)
- Foreign banks, financial crises and economic growth in Europe (2019) (11)
- Removing Privileges for Banks’ Sovereign Exposures – A Proposal (2016) (10)
- Financial Fragmentation and Economic Growth in Europe (2015) (8)
- Isabel Schnabel: Narratives about the ECB's monetary policy - reality or fiction? (2020) (8)
- A new IV approach for estimating the efficacy of macroprudential measures (2018) (7)
- Divergence of liability and control as the source of over-indebtedness and moral hazard in the European monetary union (2015) (7)
- FISCAL POLICY AND HOUSEHOLDS’ INFLATION EXPECTATIONS: EVIDENCE FROM A RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL (2021) (7)
- Credit Risk Transfer in Banking Markets with Hard and Soft Information † (2008) (7)
- Separating Trading and Banking: Consequences for Financial Stability ∗ (2014) (7)
- Reply to Thomas Ferguson and Peter Temin's “Comment on ‘The German Twin Crisis of 1931”’ (2004) (6)
- Does Family Background Matter? - Returns to Education and Family Characteristics in Germany (1998) (6)
- Bank Bonuses and Bail-out Guarantees (2010) (6)
- Expecting Bail-in? Evidence from European Banks1 (2016) (6)
- The road from micro-prudential to macro-prudential regulation (2015) (5)
- What role for central banks in safeguarding financial stability ? (2016) (5)
- Banks' Trading after the Lehman Crisis: The Role of Unconventional Monetary Policy (2017) (4)
- The great banks' depression : deposit withdrawals in the German crisis of 1931 (2003) (4)
- The Kipper- und Wipperzeit and the Foundation of Public Deposit Banks∗ (2006) (4)
- What drives the relationship between bank and sovereign credit risk (2016) (3)
- What Drives the Sovereign-Bank Nexus? (2017) (3)
- COVID-19 and monetary policy: Reinforcing prevailing challenges (2020) (3)
- Too Big To Fail Or To Save? Evidence from the CDS Market (2012) (3)
- COVID-19 and the liquidity crisis of non-banks: lessons for the future (2020) (3)
- Isabel Schnabel: How long is the medium term? Monetary policy in a low inflation environment (2020) (2)
- The road from micro- to macro-prudential regulation (2015) (2)
- Getting to Bail-in: Effects of Creditor Participation in European Bank Restructuring (2014) (2)
- Are Banks Finally Resolvable? A Perspective from Europe (2020) (2)
- Discussion of Harald Hau, Sam Langfield and David Marques-Ibanez, Bank ratings: what determines their quality? (2013) (1)
- Discussion of Thorsten Beck, Radomir Todorov and Wolf Wagner, Supervising cross-border banks: theory, evidence and policy (2013) (1)
- Implicit Guarantees and Market Discipline: Has Anything Changed Over The Financial Crisis? (2015) (1)
- Banks' Trading after the Lehman Crisis - Flight to Liquidity But No Fire Sales (2016) (1)
- Too Small to Be Saved — Competitive Effects of an Asymmetric Bail-out Policy † (2004) (1)
- The Regulation of Credit Derivative Markets (2009) (1)
- Creditor Participation Clauses: Making No Bail-Out Credible in the Euro Area (2016) (1)
- Asset Price Bubbles and Systemic Risk April 1 , 2019 (2019) (0)
- Isabel Schnabel: The European Central Bank's response to the COVID-19 pandemic (2020) (0)
- What Is the Relationship Between Asset Price Bubbles and Systemic Risk at Bank Level (2017) (0)
- The Role of Unconventional Monetary Policy (2020) (0)
- Towards a More Resilient Euro Area. Ideas from the 'Future Europe' Forum. CEPS Paperback, 18 June 2018 (2018) (0)
- Session IV 08:30-12 Central Banking: Delineation and Limitation (2014) (0)
- Isabel Schnabel: Interview in To Vima (2020) (0)
- Title : Asset Price Bubbles and Systemic Risk (2021) (0)
- License Auctions and Market Structure (2000) (0)
- Lessons from Financial Crisis – Historical Perspectives and Theoretical Concepts (2010) (0)
- But have we gone far enough? (2018) (0)
- Thomas J. Sargent and François R. Velde, The Big Problem of Small Change (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2002. 432 pp. $65). (2005) (0)
- The Regulation of Sovereign Exposures in the Context of Broader Euro Area Reforms (2020) (0)
- The New Actors of Macroprudential Supervision in Germany and Europe – A Critical Evaluation (2015) (0)
- Isabel Schnabel: Interview in Die Welt (2020) (0)
- The divorce between macro financial stability and micro supervisory responsibility: are we now in for a more stable life? – Comment (2005) (0)
- Macroeconomic Factor's Volatility, Debt Intolerance, Threshold Level and Economic Policy Implication: A Brief Economic View of Pakistan. (2013) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Isabel Schnabel?
Isabel Schnabel is affiliated with the following schools: