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
4,135 results found
A Private Committee for Monetary Reform: Process and Substance
A Roadmap to Monetary Policy Reforms
An Agenda for Monetary Action
Transitioning Standards of Value in Fixed-Value Monetary Systems
Fix What Broke: Building an Orderly and Ethical International Monetary System
Law, Legislation, and the Gold Standard
Editor’s Note
Money and Banking: A Constitutional Perspective
Monetary Muddles
International Developments in the Insurance Sector: The Road to Financial Instability?
Wall Street Offers Very Real Benefits
Thaya Brook Knight’s USA Today article, “Wall Street offers very real benefits: Opposing view,” is cited on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal
Wasting a Crisis: Why Securities Regulation Fails
Wasting a Crisis: Why Securities Regulation Fails