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Policy makers around the globe will find that Restructuring
Regulation and Financial Institutions offers a cogent assessment of
the contemporary regulatory environment in the U.S. financial
markets, and a blueprint for action in evolving global financial
markets. Financial markets are among the most highly-regulated
markets in the world. Nevertheless, financial crises still occur,
witness the U.S. savings-and-loan fiasco of the late 1980s and
early 1990s, and the Mexican and East Asian Financial implosions of
1994 and 1997. What role does regulation play in
stabilizing-or-destabilizing financial markets? Restructuring
Regulation and Financial Institutions answers this question with
incisive analysis of financial market regulation in the United
States. Each paper considers how regulation enhances or impedes the
efficiency of a particular financial sector, and is followed by
comments by two or three noted experts. The result of this approach
is a wealth of useful information that may be applied by policy
makers contemplating the restructuring of regulations and financial
institutions. The contributors to this volume are distinguished
economists, many of whom have careers not just in business,
government, or academia, but have held influential positions in all
three. Such varied backgrounds enable the contributors to offer
remarkable insights based on the best of theory and practice. Never
before has understanding the workings of U.S. financial market
regulation been so important to the development of world financial
markets. The ramifications of financial regulation in the United
States extend far beyond the nation's borders. World financial
markets are undergoing dramatic change, driven by the rapid
development and deployment of new technology that enables
information-and money-to travel farther, faster. However, a
Byzantine array of regulatory structures in the international arena
hinders the development of efficient global financial markets.
Policy makers around the world are attempting to address the issues
by emulating the financial markets of the United States.
The future of American banking is in doubt and the industry and the
federal insurance fund that helps support it are in turmoil. The
ingredients of the turmoil have been simmering in public view since
at least the early 1980s when commercial bank loans to lesser
developed countries (LDCs) began to default. The difficulties began
to boil at the end of the decade when the prospect first arose that
the banks' deposit insurer, the Bank Insurance Fund (BIF) that is
administered by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC),
might require dollars to resolve bank failure as occurred in the
savings and loan debacle. This book frames the major economic and
policy issues raised by the banking crisis whose resolution largely
determines the future of American banking. It focuses on the
current reported condition of the banking industry, concentrating
on large banks in particular. A longer-run economic prognosis for
the banking industry is presented and the implications of future
bank failures for the financial services sector and federal
regulatory policy are discussed. Most importantly the book contains
suggestions for changes in the nation's deposit-insurance system
and accompanying banking laws. These changes would reduce the
federal government's deposit insurance liability and would provide
banks with potentially profitable opportunities. The study includes
a wealth of data on the financial condition of American banks and
the system as a whole, some of it not easily obtainable from any
other source. The authors are internationally recognized as
knowledgeable experts on the state of the American banking system
and the options and prospects for US banking reform.
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