2017
DOI: 10.1177/0003122417701115
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The Hazards of Expert Control: Chief Risk Officers and Risky Derivatives

Abstract: At the turn of the century, regulators introduced policies to control bank risk-taking. Many banks appointed chief risk officers (CROs), yet bank holdings of new, complex, and untested financial derivatives subsequently soared. Why did banks expand use of new derivatives? We suggest that CROs encouraged the rise of new derivatives in two ways. First, we build on institutional arguments about the expert construction of compliance, suggesting that risk experts arrived with an agenda of maximizing risk-adjusted r… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(32 citation statements)
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References 79 publications
(114 reference statements)
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“…has led a lot of firms to refocus their entire world-view around data and to create more of it (Bean, 2018;Pernell, Jung, & Dobbin, 2017).…”
Section: The Paradox Of Ignorancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…has led a lot of firms to refocus their entire world-view around data and to create more of it (Bean, 2018;Pernell, Jung, & Dobbin, 2017).…”
Section: The Paradox Of Ignorancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In law, globalization has created pressure for new cross-border services (Smets, Morris, and Greenwood, 2012) and forms of organizing (Greenwood and Suddaby, 2006). In finance, increased market competition has created pressure for bigger risk taking (Pernell, Jung, and Dobbin, 2017) and greater work automation (Beunza and Millo, 2014). In architecture, growth in demand for new business services has created pressure for novel types of creative design (Rahman and Barley, 2017) and representation (Retelny and Hinds, 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, we suggest risk management can take a leadership and coordination role, linking these functions to the rest of the organisation through a guiding theoretical concern with the purposeful cross-functional co-development of risk forecasting knowledge. As articulated in literature exploring the relationship between professions and institutional change (Daudigeos, 2013;Muzio et al, 2013) (Aabo et al, 2005;Harrison and Phillips, 2014;Pernell et al, 2017;Karanja and Rosso, 2017). Correspondingly, we envisage risk management ownership of 'booster infrastructure' for risk radar as requiring new leadership and coordination roles, as well as related job descriptions and other forms of guidance.…”
Section: A Dangerous High Stakes Activity?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Speaking further to the above issue of cross-functional leadership and coordination, it can also be argued (see Aabo et al, 2005;Harrison and Phillips, 2014;Pernell et al, 2017;Karanja and Rosso, 2017), that the risk profession is already strongly aspirant towards subsuming various other -sometimes competing -organisational functions to serve its master concept of a singular, overarching, early warning risk radar for organisations. Such empirebuilding efforts by risk management entail that organisational groundwork for our proposal is already well established in many organisations.…”
Section: Erm Context For Boosted Risk Radarsmentioning
confidence: 99%