Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation explained

Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation
Abbreviation:CSFI
Formation:1993
Type:Thought leadership and research
Purpose:Think tank
Location:United Kingdom
Language:English
Owners:-->

The Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation (CSFI) is a think tank established in 1993 that seeks to engage in and promote free and progressive discussion about the challenges and opportunities facing the modern financial services sector. The aim of our research is to open thought-provoking debate about the financial services, with a view to making the industry more transparent, more inclusive and, above all, more sustainable. Following many years of collaboration on events and debates, and on Financial World, LIBF’s quarterly magazine, CSFI formally joined LIBF in November 2022.

Activities

The CSFI holds round-table meetings, bringing together finance practitioners, regulators, academics and members of the professions. Prospect Magazine, in its annual Think Tank Awards for 2012, said: "The Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation retains its good reputation for scrutinising regulations and for roundtables".

The work of the CSFI focuses on the most significant drivers of change in the industry, including:

Other activities include hosting webinars, producing podcasts and writing and publishing a variety of written content including reports, white papers, short articles and blogs.

Publications

As of 2023 CSFI has published 120 reports on subjects of interest to financial services, including technology, new products, regulatory issues and risk management.
Perhaps best known is the Banana Skins series[1] [2] [3] which, for more than a decade, has provided a risk barometer of the banking sector and, more recently, insurance and microfinance. Other publications which have received notable attention include The Cost of Inequality - putting a price on health (July 2021) and The Digital Currency Revolution (April 2020).

The Centre has editorial responsibility for Financial World, a magazine published quarterly by LIBF, with a global circulation of 22,000.The CSFI has published two books: The Credit Crunch Diaries (2009),[4] by David Lascelles and Nick Carn, and Grumpy Old Bankers (2009).[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Hill. Andrew. Banks and banana skins. Financial Times. 2 February 2010.
  2. News: Harris. Julian. Fear of more bank failures still to come. City AM. 30 January 2012.
  3. News: Steyn. Lisa. SA banks worried about costs of economic crime. Mail & Guardian. 31 January 2012.
  4. News: Swann. Christopher. The Credit Crunch Diaries. https://web.archive.org/web/20091114111130/http://blogs.reuters.com/commentaries/2009/11/10/the-credit-crunch-diaries/. dead. 14 November 2009. Reuters. 10 November 2009.
  5. News: Peston. Robert. Back to the nineteenth century?. BBC. 19 March 2009.