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Saturday November 21, 2009

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Fixing Finance Series

Fixing Finance is a series of papers on selected financial reform topics written by experts in Economic Studies' Initiative on Business and Public Policy. The series hosts events and issues short briefing papers on the current financial crisis and stabilizing and growing the economy long-term.

Strengthening and Streamlining Prudential Bank Supervision

August 06, 2009

Financial sector regulation was one of several causes of the financial crisis that has devastated the U.S. economy and spread globally. We can do better than the current bewildering alphabet soup of regulators, says Martin Baily, by simplifying and streamlining regulation into a single micro prudential regulator.

The U.S. Financial and Economic Crisis: Where Does It Stand and Where Do We Go From Here?

June 15, 2009

The economy is showing signs that it is likely bottoming out and heading toward a weak recovery, but we need to keep our optimism—and our policy actions—in check, argue Martin Baily and Douglas Elliott. Many risks remain for both the banking system and the larger economy, and they argue for increased focus on existing financial rescue plans and the banking sector.

Regulating Systemic Risk

March 30, 2009

The Treasury Department recently released its plan to fix the financial system, which rightly concentrates on reducing systemic risk, argues Robert Litan. While there are legitimate concerns about vesting such large responsibilities with any financial regulator, as long as there are financial institutions whose failure could lead to calamitous financial and eco­nomic consequences, then some arm of the federal government must over­see systemic risk and do the best it can to make that oversight work.

Regulating Insurance After the Crisis

March 04, 2009

With large and ongoing government bailouts of AIG, Robert Litan says that any reform of the nation’s financial system should include an update to the nation’s antiquated system of state insurance regulation. He believes that given the taxpayer exposure to the potential failure of large insurers—or those deemed to be “systemically important”—it is time that the federal government oversee all aspects of these operations to assure their continued solvency.

Fixing Finance: A Roadmap for Reform

February 2009

As policy-makers and the public have been focused on the stimulus and the bank bailout, tough policy questions about how to get at the root cause of the current economic problems remain—how to fix the financial system for the long-term. Martin Baily and Robert Litan lay out a roadmap for reform, one that harnesses the forces of market discipline that were ignored in the run-up to the current crisis, which they say can and must be retained after the need for massive short-run government intervention has passed.

The Origins of the Financial Crisis

November 2008

In the third installment of the Fixing Finance series, Martin Baily, Robert Litan and Matthew Johnson conduct a thorough analysis of the origins of the financial crisis. They conclude that the crisis had its origins in an asset price bubble that interacted with new kinds of financial innovations that masked risk, with companies that failed to follow their own risk management procedures, and with regulators and supervisors who failed to restrain excessive taking.

Making the Rescue Package Work: Asset and Equity Purchases

October 10, 2008

With fears of a global recession pounding markets worldwide, many are watching closely to see if the U.S. Treasury can quickly implement the recent bailout package in a way that stabilizes the financial markets and unfreezes credit. Brookings experts Martin Baily and Robert Litan take a look at the Treasury Department’s chances of success and argue that the omens thus far are “not encouraging."

Fixing Finance Series

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