“Market discipline”—the theory that short-term creditors can efficiently rein in bank risk through their self-interested actions—has been a central pillar of banking regulation since the late 1980s, both in the United States and abroad. While market discipline did not prevent the buildup of bank risk that caused the recent financial crisis, the conventional wisdom has been that this failure was due to extrinsic factors that impeded the effective operation of market discipline, rather than any underlying problems with the theory itself. As a result, policymakers have increased regulatory reliance on market discipline, making this a central part of their reform efforts. This Article challenges the prevailing wisdom and makes two contributions...
In recent years, market discipline has attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or replace gover...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
“Market discipline”—the theory that short-term creditors can efficiently rein in bank risk through t...
Due to principal-agency frictions, firms tend to engage in moral hazard behaviour. The banking indus...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
This Article considers the federal banking regulation regime implemented in response to the widespre...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
We show that market discipline can be effective in resolving the moral hazard problem which arises w...
Effective market discipline incentivizes financial institutions to limit their risk-taking behavior,...
In the present climate of intense debate over deposit insurance reform, the nature and limits of mar...
This Article considers the federal banking regulation regime implemented in response to the widespre...
We show that market discipline, defined as the extent to which firm specific risk characteristics ar...
Fifty-four banks failed in the first quarter of 1987, more than in any quarter since 1933. Because b...
This dissertation provides theoretical and empirical support for the mechanism of market discipline ...
In recent years, market discipline has attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or replace gover...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
“Market discipline”—the theory that short-term creditors can efficiently rein in bank risk through t...
Due to principal-agency frictions, firms tend to engage in moral hazard behaviour. The banking indus...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
This Article considers the federal banking regulation regime implemented in response to the widespre...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
We show that market discipline can be effective in resolving the moral hazard problem which arises w...
Effective market discipline incentivizes financial institutions to limit their risk-taking behavior,...
In the present climate of intense debate over deposit insurance reform, the nature and limits of mar...
This Article considers the federal banking regulation regime implemented in response to the widespre...
We show that market discipline, defined as the extent to which firm specific risk characteristics ar...
Fifty-four banks failed in the first quarter of 1987, more than in any quarter since 1933. Because b...
This dissertation provides theoretical and empirical support for the mechanism of market discipline ...
In recent years, market discipline has attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or replace gover...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...
In recent years market discipline attracted interest as a mechanism to augment or to partially repla...