Deregulation, much like regulation itself, is a rational political response to pressure from discrete economic groups that benefit from such deregulation. Such pressures explain many, if not all, of the actions and inactions of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) with respect to implementing a national market system in the United States. For example, Gregg Jarrell, the chief economist at the SEC, recently relied upon such a political support theory, to explain the SEC\u27s abolition of fixed-rate commissions on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
In most areas of economic regulation, the movement toward greater state autonomy has been associated...
The usual way economists and regulators think about regulation and competition policy is in terms o...
The main point of this Article is that the demand-side of U.S. capital markets is not functioning ...
Deregulation, much like regulation itself, is a rational political response to pressure from discret...
Increasing pressure from institutional investors during the last two decades has led to indirect dis...
The author discusses the need for and the desirability of governmental regulation of the securities ...
One of the consequences of the financial crisis of 2008 was a renewed focus on the issue of deregula...
This Article is about the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as a political entity. The basic ...
To the handful of traders who founded the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 1792 – and perhaps even ...
A Review of The SEC and the Public Interest by Susan M. Phillips and J. Richard Zeche
This Article presents new approach to the concept of deregulation in financial services and partic...
Since liberalization became the dominant global narrative the stock response to market shortcomings ...
Market regulation has been induced by market failures such as natural monopoly and a-symmetric infor...
The U.S. regulation of derivative securities-financial instrumentswhose value is derived from an und...
Following the 1929 collapse, much attention has been centered on the role of the security exchanges ...
In most areas of economic regulation, the movement toward greater state autonomy has been associated...
The usual way economists and regulators think about regulation and competition policy is in terms o...
The main point of this Article is that the demand-side of U.S. capital markets is not functioning ...
Deregulation, much like regulation itself, is a rational political response to pressure from discret...
Increasing pressure from institutional investors during the last two decades has led to indirect dis...
The author discusses the need for and the desirability of governmental regulation of the securities ...
One of the consequences of the financial crisis of 2008 was a renewed focus on the issue of deregula...
This Article is about the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as a political entity. The basic ...
To the handful of traders who founded the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 1792 – and perhaps even ...
A Review of The SEC and the Public Interest by Susan M. Phillips and J. Richard Zeche
This Article presents new approach to the concept of deregulation in financial services and partic...
Since liberalization became the dominant global narrative the stock response to market shortcomings ...
Market regulation has been induced by market failures such as natural monopoly and a-symmetric infor...
The U.S. regulation of derivative securities-financial instrumentswhose value is derived from an und...
Following the 1929 collapse, much attention has been centered on the role of the security exchanges ...
In most areas of economic regulation, the movement toward greater state autonomy has been associated...
The usual way economists and regulators think about regulation and competition policy is in terms o...
The main point of this Article is that the demand-side of U.S. capital markets is not functioning ...