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In Chapter 5, William Shughart also considers the part that
politics played in banking legislation during the 1930s, but he
looks at the banking legislation passed in the United States.
Shughart draws par ticular attention to the provisions in the
Banking Act of 1933 that required the separation of commercial and
investment banking activ ities. Applying a public choice analysis,
Shughart asks who gained from the provisions, and he concludes that
the commercial banking industry, the investment banking industry,
and the U. S. Treasury Department can all be said to have benefited
in the years immedi ately following the passage of the act. Richard
Timberlake, in his comment, extends Shughart's analysis to show how
the federal gov ernment manipulated the monetary policy of the
1930s for its own benefit. The history of the regulation of the
savings and loan industry is the subject of Chapter 6. James Barth
and Martin Regalia examine the way in which regulation of the
industry has evolved since the first savings and loan was
established in the 1830s. They conclude that the stated purpose of
regulation appears to have changed, even while the regulations
themselves often have not. Barth and Regalia provide some important
insights into the contribution of thrift regu lation to the current
problems facing the indusb-y as well as some suggestions about the
direction reform should-and should not take."
This book provides analysis of the current financial/economic
crisis from the Director of the Banking Sector at the FSA
(Financial Services Authority). This new edition is updated to take
into account the current changes in regulation and legislation in
the US, EU and UK. Many of these changes were in line with the
recommendations made in the original edition.
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