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PAPERS
&
STUDIES
in Financial Services
Risk-inviting microeconomic rules of the banking game that are established by government have always been the key additional necessary condition to producing a propensity for banking distress.
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Joint Statement of the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committees of Asia, Australia-New Zealand, Europe, Japan, Latin America, and the United States
This is the eighth joint statement of the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committees of Asia, Australia-New Zealand, Europe, Japan, Latin America, and the United States.
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Statement No. 278
The Committee believes that the primary function of the CFPA should be to simplify and make more informative current disclosure requirements to ensure that consumers receive sufficient information about financial products to make informed decisions.
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Statement No. 277
The Committee is concerned about increasing interference with independent accounting standard setting and recommends separating accounting standard setting and financial reporting from measuring regulatory capital for financial institutions.
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Statement No. 276
The Committee strongly supports the SEC Chairman Schapiro's commitment to base the agency's regulatory reaction on its professional judgment underpinned with careful empirical studies and not on accommodating political pressure.
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Statement No. 275
The Committee believes that the federal safety net that was extended to money market mutual funds could be removed by marking their portfolios to market on a daily basis.
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The main story of the subprime crisis is one of government errors of commission.
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What's Old, What's New, and What's Next
The American financial system, if it remains true to its history, will adapt and innovate its way back to profitability and high stock prices sooner than is suggested bycurrent dire predictions.
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An Encompassing View of the Past and Present
Capital inflow bonanzas are troublesome for advanced economies, in which they are associated with economic crises, and for emerging markets, in which they contribute to economic vulnerability.
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Lessons from the 2007-2008 Housing Turmoil
Home prices are quite sticky, andfears of a major fall in house prices, with all of its attendant negative macroeconomic consequences, typically are not warranted even in extreme foreclosure circumstances.
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AEI Education Stimulus Watch The AEI Education Stimulus Watch (ESW) is a quarterly series of special reports on the K-12 education implications of the federal government's economic stimulus package. Adjunct scholar Andy Smarick tracks this unparalleled federal investment in schooling and examines whether these funds are yielding innovation and improvement or merely subsidizing the status quo.
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