While it is generally assumed that financial regulations contribute to financial stability and safety, experience shows that they can also be a cause of instability. Sound financial regulatory policy should therefore seek to not merely impose new regulations but to discover and strip away those regulations that can be shown to do more harm than good. It should also favor regulations that encourage financial-industry innovation, including ones that allow nonbank financial technology, or fintech, firms to compete on a level playing field with banks. Finally, to further encourage such innovation, policy should limit the government’s involvement in the direct provision of financial to those (rare) instances in which a clearly identified “market failure” prevents private-sector firms from doing the job with a reasonable degree of efficiency.
Banking and Finance
199 results found
Polluting Our Principles: Environmental Prosecutions and the Bill of Rights
The Burden of Government-Sponsored Enterprises: The Case of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
Government Loans for the Soviet Union: A Disservice to U.S. Taxpayers and Soviets Alike
Secretary Kemp and the Housing Policy Shell Game
Judging the 1991 Reform Effort: Do U.S. Banks Have a Future?
Market Squabbles: SEC v. CFTC
Housing Policy in New York: Myth and Reality
The Source of America’s Housing Problem: Look in Your Own Back Yard
SEC’s Insider Trading Proposal: Good Politics, Bad Policy
Interstate Banking: The Reform That Won’t Go Away
Nonbank Banks Are Not the Problem
Totalitarian Global Management: The UN’s War on the Liberal International Economic Order
The Case for Free Banking: Then and Now
Private Deposit Insurance: Stabilizing the Banking System