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Revista de Economía Institucional
Print version ISSN 0124-5996
Abstract
GOODHART, Charles. HOW SHOULD WE REGULATE BANK CAPITAL AND FINANCIAL PRODUCTS? WHAT ROLE FOR "LIVING WILLS"?. Rev.econ.inst. [online]. 2010, vol.12, n.23, pp.85-109. ISSN 0124-5996.
Financial regulation is normally imposed in reaction to some prior crisis, rather than founded on theoretical principle. In the past, regulation has been deployed to improve risk management practices in individual banks. This was misguided. Instead, regulation should focus first on systemic externalities (contagion) and second on consumer protection (asymmetric information). The quantification of systemic externalities is difficult. Since the costs of financial breakdown is high, a natural response is to pile extra regulation onto a set of regulated intermediaries, but this can impair their capacity to intermediate and leads onto border problems, between regulated and unregulated and between different national regulatory systems.
Keywords : financial regulation; contagion; bank governance; risk assessment; systemic risk; boundary problems.