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April 25, 2010
Pan on International Financial Regulation
Eric J. Pan has posted Challenge of International Cooperation and Institutional Design in Financial Supervision: Beyond Transgovernmental Networks on SSRN with the following abstract:
This
paper explores the case for a global financial regulator. It first
identifies two problems with how legal scholars viewed the international
financial architecture before the financial crisis. International law
scholars mistakenly thought that informal transgovernmental networks
could serve as the heart of an international regulatory framework. In
fact, the international financial architecture proved incapable of
preventing or managing the causes and effects of the recent financial
crisis. The reason why is the second problem. Financial law
scholars did not speak out more strongly before the crisis about the
limitations of the international financial architecture. They focused
their attention on the coordination and harmonization of rules and
standards in areas of accounting, securities, and bank capital adequacy,
but did not resolve the problems of prudential supervision of
cross-border financial institutions and systemic risk regulation. The
failure of states to provide for an international legal regime capable
of conducting prudential supervision of cross-border financial
institutions proved to be one reason why the international financial
architecture could not address the spread of financial instability.
This
paper sets forth an international administrative law
model for international financial regulation. It advocates the creation
of an international body that has the power and resources to supervise
cross-border financial institutions, demand action by national
supervisors, promulgate supervisory standards, conduct inspections, and
initiate enforcement proceedings. Acknowledging possible objections to
an international administrative law model, particularly
those related to the protection of state sovereignty and democratic
accountability, this paper argues that an international administrative
agency is the best solution to the problem of global financial
regulation.
ECC
April 25, 2010 in Eric C. Chaffee, Resources - Scholarship | Permalink
