Professor Catherine Schenk
After my undergraduate and Masters degrees at University of Toronto in Economics, International Relations and Chinese Studies, I went to the London School of Economics to complete my PhD in Economic History. Since then I have held academic positions at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, Royal Holloway, University of London and University of Glasgow. I have also been visiting professor at Nankai University, China, and Hong Kong University. Outside academia I have spent time as a visiting researcher at the International Monetary Fund and at the Hong Kong Institute for Monetary Research. In 2018/19 I was Senior Lamfalussy Fellow at the Bank for International Settlements, delivering the Per Jacobsson Lecture in 2020. I am President of the Economic History Society and Associate Fellow in international economics at Chatham House.
Research Interests
- International economic relations
- International monetary system
- International banking and finance
My research focuses on the development of the international economy since 1945 with particular emphasis on the evolution of international banking and finance and the international monetary system. My current ERC funded project is GloCoBank, which is charting the development of global correspondent banking from 1870-2000 . My other research focuses on the transitions between international currencies, proposals for reform of the international monetary system in the 1970s and 1980s and the development of international banking and financial regulation. Finally, I have a special interest in the history of China’s international economic relations through Hong Kong.
In the Media
History of Capitalism lecture: Hong Kong: Myths and Truths about a 'Free Market Paradise'
Legatum Institute, London, 2 June 2016
https://www.youtube.com/embed/rlh_Rrs7_jI?controls=0
Reinventing Bretton Woods: 70 Years After Bretton Woods
The International Monetary System, Hangzhou China, 2015
Current DPhil Students
Projects
Publications
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Regulatory foundations of financialisation: May Day, Big Bang and international banking 1975-1990
December 2020|Journal article|Financial History ReviewFrom the 1970s to the 1990s there was a revolution in international financial markets, which combined the processes of financialisation and globalisation. Deregulation and financial innovation were the two underlying forces that facilitated this transformation. At the same time distinctive national characteristics of banking structures and cultures influenced the way that financial globalisation affected the geographic distribution of financial activity. This article addresses these seismic shifts through three perspectives: changes in regulation and the geographic pattern of international banking activity, reform of the main stock markets in New York and London and the rise of financial conglomerates. It identifies complementarity as well as competition among international financial centres.financialisation, globalisation, International financial centres, financial regulation, stock exchange reform -
The global financial crisis and banking regulation: another turn of the wheel?
November 2020|Journal article|Journal of Modern European HistoryThis article traces the cyclical turn of reform of banking regulations since the 1930s. Although the impact of the great depression on regulatory reform after 2007 is well recognised, to leap from the 1930s to 2008 neglects the many regulatory reforms and changes in the structure of global banking and finance that occurred in the twentieth century. Although they have not attracted as much academic or public attention, it is important to note the contribution of these developments to the evolution of regulation and international cooperation. Three innovations stand out on an international level: central bank swaps in the 1960s, international cooperation on cross-border banking in the 1970s, and the erosion of barriers between retail and investment banking in the 1980s.financial crisis, banking regulation, central bank swaps -
The Governance of the Bank for International Settlements 1973-2020
April 2020|Chapter|Promoting Global Monetary and Financial Stability: The Bank for International Settlements after Bretton Woods, 1973–2020The changes in the structure, organization and governance of the BIS from the 1970s to the early 21st century were profoundly affected by international political change as well as the shifting pattern of global banking. The end of the Cold War and the rise of Asia rebalanced the global economy. At the same time these decades witnessed the explosion of international financial activity, rapid financial innovation and changes to the role and influence of central banks. The challenges posed by the transformation of international finance became even more profoundly important in the wake of the global financial crisis in 2007-8. But the structure and operations of the BIS also responded to internal pressures, especially changes in leadership and vision, and were constrained by the Bank’s formal Statutes from its founding in 1930. This chapter will explore how these external and internal pressures manifested themselves in the structures and governance of the BIS. -
BIS Working Papers
Central bank swaps then and now: swaps and dollar liquidity in the 1960s
April 2020|Working paper|BIS Working PapersThis paper explores the record of central bank swaps to draw out four themes. First, this recent device of central bank cooperation had a sustained pre-history from 1962-1998, surviving the transition from fixed to floating exchange rates. Second, Federal Reserve swap facilities have generally formed a part of a wider network of central bank swap lines. Third, we take issue with the view of swaps as previously used only to manage exchange rates and only more recently to manage offshore funding liquidity and yields. In particular, we spotlight how in the 1960s the Federal Reserve, working in conjunction with the BIS and European central banks, repeatedly used swaps to manage eurodollar funding liquidity and Libor yields. BIS, Bank of England and Swiss National Bank archives show an intention to offset seasonal disturbances to funding liquidity in order to prevent eurodollar yield spikes. Fourth, this earlier cooperation underscores the Federal Reserve’s use of swaps to prevent eurodollar shortages from interfering with the transmission of its domestic monetary policy. The US interest in the eurodollar market, and thus its self interest in central bank cooperation, is unlikely to end even when Libor is replaced as the benchmark for US floating-rate loans and mortgages.monetary cooperation, central banks, global financial safety net, eurodollar -
Origins of the Asia Dollar Market 1968-86: regulatory competition and complementarity in Hong Kong and Singapore
April 2020|Journal article|Financial History Review