Regulatory arbitrage, or the ability of financial firms to circumvent or neutralize rules, is a classic problem of financial regulation. This article draws on transaction cost economics (TCE) to reformulate this old problem, thus defining regulatory arbitrage as a contracting hazard arising from interactions between the regulator and regulated firms, given bounded rationality and opportunism. Following standard TCE, the article first characterizes the implicit regulatory contract in finance, focusing in particular on the mobile and elastic nature of regulated actors and financial assets as well as the contested utility of financial innovation. It is then argued that this incomplete and hazard‐prone regulatory bargain must be matched with a ...
textabstractAbstract: This paper is one chapter of the volume “Regulation and Economics” of the seco...
Existing financial market architectures combine astonishing complexity with tight coupling, making t...
Hedge funds, as paragons of exploiting regulatory discrepancies, are heavily criticized for thwartin...
Regulatory arbitrage, or the ability of financial firms to circumvent or neutralize rules, is a clas...
The use of contractual engineering to create channels of credit intermediation outside of the realm ...
This paper analyzes the problem of designing optimal financial regulation when regulatory arbitrage ...
Regulatory arbitrage is an indispensable element of regulatory competition as it provides regulatory...
This article analyses regulatory arbitrage in financial markets from a risk-based perspective. It as...
This article outlines the reasons that banks and other financial institutions engage in regulatory c...
This paper contributes to the debate on the adequate regulatory treatment of non-bank financial inte...
Regulatory arbitrage – the formal compliance with rules while violating their very spirit – is a per...
This policy-oriented article argues for deploying conflict of laws doctrines as a tool of coordinati...
The financial crisis of 2007-2008 has unveiled the hidden flaws in the regulatory framework of the f...
This paper contributes to the debate on the adequate regulatory treatment of non-bank financial inte...
SAFE Working Paper No. 260, European Banking Institute Working Paper Series No. 49, LawFin Working P...
textabstractAbstract: This paper is one chapter of the volume “Regulation and Economics” of the seco...
Existing financial market architectures combine astonishing complexity with tight coupling, making t...
Hedge funds, as paragons of exploiting regulatory discrepancies, are heavily criticized for thwartin...
Regulatory arbitrage, or the ability of financial firms to circumvent or neutralize rules, is a clas...
The use of contractual engineering to create channels of credit intermediation outside of the realm ...
This paper analyzes the problem of designing optimal financial regulation when regulatory arbitrage ...
Regulatory arbitrage is an indispensable element of regulatory competition as it provides regulatory...
This article analyses regulatory arbitrage in financial markets from a risk-based perspective. It as...
This article outlines the reasons that banks and other financial institutions engage in regulatory c...
This paper contributes to the debate on the adequate regulatory treatment of non-bank financial inte...
Regulatory arbitrage – the formal compliance with rules while violating their very spirit – is a per...
This policy-oriented article argues for deploying conflict of laws doctrines as a tool of coordinati...
The financial crisis of 2007-2008 has unveiled the hidden flaws in the regulatory framework of the f...
This paper contributes to the debate on the adequate regulatory treatment of non-bank financial inte...
SAFE Working Paper No. 260, European Banking Institute Working Paper Series No. 49, LawFin Working P...
textabstractAbstract: This paper is one chapter of the volume “Regulation and Economics” of the seco...
Existing financial market architectures combine astonishing complexity with tight coupling, making t...
Hedge funds, as paragons of exploiting regulatory discrepancies, are heavily criticized for thwartin...