Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost/handle/Hannan/72
Title: The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, 1952-2016 :
Other Titles: central bank of oil /
Authors: Banafe, Ahmed, ; author ;;MacLeod, Rory, ; author ;
subject: Mueassasat al-Naqd al-eArabe al-Saeede ; History ;;Monetary policy ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;;Money ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;;Banks and banking ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;
Year: 2017
place: Cham, Switzerland :
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan,
Series/Report no.: Financial institutions, reforms, and policies in Muslim countries ;
Financial institutions, reforms, and policies in Muslim countries ;
Abstract: This book sheds new light on the critical importance of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), a remarkably successful central bank that is a model for developing oil exporters worldwide. As a "swing producer", Saudi Arabia has traditionally stepped in to make up for oil supply shortfalls in other OPEC countries, or to scale back their own production when overabundance might lead to a price crash. Since 2014, Saudi Arabia has changed its policy in response to the rise of American shale oil, in search of a long-term strategy that will, once again, help balance supply and demand at a steady price. In its informal dual role of central bank and sovereign wealth fund, SAMA must navigate the paradoxes faced by monoline oil producing countries: the need for diversification vs. dependence on oil-based revenue; the loss of foreign exchange reserves that follows oil-financed government spending; the unreliability of revenue from oil; the challenges of using a Western model for supervising Shariah-compliant banks; and the need to have a balancing mix of oil and financial assets. As SAMA (now the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority) reassesses its role in 2017, this history and guide to current policy issues will prove invaluable for policymakers in oil producing economies looking to apply lessons from the past as they plan for the future ;
Description: Ohio Library and Information Network ;

Available to OhioLINK libraries ;


Printed edition: ; 9783319552170 ;

URI: http://localhost/handle/Hannan/72
ISBN: 9783319552187 ;
331955218X ;
3319552171 ;
9783319552170 ;
More Information: 1 online resource (XXI, 330 pages) ;
Includes bibliographical references and index ;
Appears in Collections:مدیریت مالی گرایش بانکداری

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
9783319552187.pdf10.85 MBAdobe PDFThumbnail
Preview File
Title: The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, 1952-2016 :
Other Titles: central bank of oil /
Authors: Banafe, Ahmed, ; author ;;MacLeod, Rory, ; author ;
subject: Mueassasat al-Naqd al-eArabe al-Saeede ; History ;;Monetary policy ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;;Money ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;;Banks and banking ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;
Year: 2017
place: Cham, Switzerland :
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan,
Series/Report no.: Financial institutions, reforms, and policies in Muslim countries ;
Financial institutions, reforms, and policies in Muslim countries ;
Abstract: This book sheds new light on the critical importance of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), a remarkably successful central bank that is a model for developing oil exporters worldwide. As a "swing producer", Saudi Arabia has traditionally stepped in to make up for oil supply shortfalls in other OPEC countries, or to scale back their own production when overabundance might lead to a price crash. Since 2014, Saudi Arabia has changed its policy in response to the rise of American shale oil, in search of a long-term strategy that will, once again, help balance supply and demand at a steady price. In its informal dual role of central bank and sovereign wealth fund, SAMA must navigate the paradoxes faced by monoline oil producing countries: the need for diversification vs. dependence on oil-based revenue; the loss of foreign exchange reserves that follows oil-financed government spending; the unreliability of revenue from oil; the challenges of using a Western model for supervising Shariah-compliant banks; and the need to have a balancing mix of oil and financial assets. As SAMA (now the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority) reassesses its role in 2017, this history and guide to current policy issues will prove invaluable for policymakers in oil producing economies looking to apply lessons from the past as they plan for the future ;
Description: Ohio Library and Information Network ;

Available to OhioLINK libraries ;


Printed edition: ; 9783319552170 ;

URI: http://localhost/handle/Hannan/72
ISBN: 9783319552187 ;
331955218X ;
3319552171 ;
9783319552170 ;
More Information: 1 online resource (XXI, 330 pages) ;
Includes bibliographical references and index ;
Appears in Collections:مدیریت مالی گرایش بانکداری

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
9783319552187.pdf10.85 MBAdobe PDFThumbnail
Preview File
Title: The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, 1952-2016 :
Other Titles: central bank of oil /
Authors: Banafe, Ahmed, ; author ;;MacLeod, Rory, ; author ;
subject: Mueassasat al-Naqd al-eArabe al-Saeede ; History ;;Monetary policy ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;;Money ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;;Banks and banking ; Saudi Arabia ; History ;
Year: 2017
place: Cham, Switzerland :
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan,
Series/Report no.: Financial institutions, reforms, and policies in Muslim countries ;
Financial institutions, reforms, and policies in Muslim countries ;
Abstract: This book sheds new light on the critical importance of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), a remarkably successful central bank that is a model for developing oil exporters worldwide. As a "swing producer", Saudi Arabia has traditionally stepped in to make up for oil supply shortfalls in other OPEC countries, or to scale back their own production when overabundance might lead to a price crash. Since 2014, Saudi Arabia has changed its policy in response to the rise of American shale oil, in search of a long-term strategy that will, once again, help balance supply and demand at a steady price. In its informal dual role of central bank and sovereign wealth fund, SAMA must navigate the paradoxes faced by monoline oil producing countries: the need for diversification vs. dependence on oil-based revenue; the loss of foreign exchange reserves that follows oil-financed government spending; the unreliability of revenue from oil; the challenges of using a Western model for supervising Shariah-compliant banks; and the need to have a balancing mix of oil and financial assets. As SAMA (now the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority) reassesses its role in 2017, this history and guide to current policy issues will prove invaluable for policymakers in oil producing economies looking to apply lessons from the past as they plan for the future ;
Description: Ohio Library and Information Network ;

Available to OhioLINK libraries ;


Printed edition: ; 9783319552170 ;

URI: http://localhost/handle/Hannan/72
ISBN: 9783319552187 ;
331955218X ;
3319552171 ;
9783319552170 ;
More Information: 1 online resource (XXI, 330 pages) ;
Includes bibliographical references and index ;
Appears in Collections:مدیریت مالی گرایش بانکداری

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
9783319552187.pdf10.85 MBAdobe PDFThumbnail
Preview File