Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-17-2010
Keywords
financial regulation, financial crisis, credit crisis, derivatives, hedge funds, AIG, Bear Stearns, money market funds
Disciplines
Law and Economics | Securities Law
Abstract
Financial regulation today is largely framed by traditional business categories. The financial markets, however, have begun to bypass those categories, principally over the last thirty years. Chief among the changes has been convergence in the products and services offered by traditional intermediaries and new market entrants, as well as a shift in capital-raising and risk-bearing from traditional intermediation to the capital markets. The result has been the reintroduction of old problems addressed by (but now beyond the reach of) current regulation, and the rise of new problems that reflect change in how capital and financial risk can now be managed and transferred.
In this Article, I begin to assess the current U.S. approach to financial regulation, in light of recent changes in the financial system, and offer a tentative way forward to address gaps in proposals for regulatory reform. Regulators must focus on the principal problems that financial regulation is intended to address – relating to financial stability and risk-taking – without regard to fixed categories, intermediaries, business models, or functions. Doing so, however, requires a prospective assessment of the markets, a different approach from the reactive process that characterizes much of financial regulation today.
Recommended Citation
Whitehead, Charles K., "Reframing Financial Regulation" (2010). Cornell Law Faculty Publications. 42.
https://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/facpub/42
Publication Citation
Charles K. Whitehead, "Reframing Financial Regulation", 90 Boston University Law Review (2010)