[1] In the period of
financial deregulation in Australia, dating from the early 1980s, the average spread of major banks has declined from about 5.0 per cent to 3.2 per cent in 1998.
Detractors also point to Summers» support for
financial deregulation in the 1990s.
Not exact matches
While Aidan Garrib, global macro strategist for Pavilion Global Markets
in Montreal, likewise doubts the Trump administration's ability to effect his plans
in the time frame that investors» widely expect, one area he thinks will get some traction is
financial industry
deregulation.
The
deregulation in 2010 of the yuan
in Hong Kong turned the city into a RMB investment hub, a position for which London, Singapore and other
financial centres are now vying.
Fears that Trump may unduly consider his indebtedness to Deutsche Bank
in deciding his administration's policy toward the
financial sector go beyond general anxiety about
deregulation.
Some of the key ones relating to the early phase of
deregulation are: I Macfarlane (ed)(1991), The Deregulation of Financial Intermediaries, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 20 — 21 June; M Edey (ed)(1996), The Future of the Financial System, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 8 — 9 July; Gizycki M and P Lowe (2000), «The Australian Financial System in the 1990s», in D Gruen and S Shrestha (eds), The Australian Economy in the 1990s, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 24 — 25 July, pp 180 — 215; Edey M and B Gray (1996), «The Evolving Structure of the Australian Financial System», RBA Research Discussion Paper No 9605; Battellino R and N McMillan (1989), «Changes in the Behaviour of Banks and their Implications for Financial Aggregates», RBA Research Discussion Pa
deregulation are: I Macfarlane (ed)(1991), The
Deregulation of Financial Intermediaries, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 20 — 21 June; M Edey (ed)(1996), The Future of the Financial System, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 8 — 9 July; Gizycki M and P Lowe (2000), «The Australian Financial System in the 1990s», in D Gruen and S Shrestha (eds), The Australian Economy in the 1990s, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 24 — 25 July, pp 180 — 215; Edey M and B Gray (1996), «The Evolving Structure of the Australian Financial System», RBA Research Discussion Paper No 9605; Battellino R and N McMillan (1989), «Changes in the Behaviour of Banks and their Implications for Financial Aggregates», RBA Research Discussion Pa
Deregulation of
Financial Intermediaries, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 20 — 21 June; M Edey (ed)(1996), The Future of the
Financial System, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 8 — 9 July; Gizycki M and P Lowe (2000), «The Australian
Financial System
in the 1990s»,
in D Gruen and S Shrestha (eds), The Australian Economy
in the 1990s, Proceedings of a Conference, Reserve Bank of Australia, Sydney, 24 — 25 July, pp 180 — 215; Edey M and B Gray (1996), «The Evolving Structure of the Australian
Financial System», RBA Research Discussion Paper No 9605; Battellino R and N McMillan (1989), «Changes
in the Behaviour of Banks and their Implications for
Financial Aggregates», RBA Research Discussion Paper No 8904.
In preparing for something, I was reading the text of the Choice Act — that's the financial deregulation bill the House recently passed (there's a link in the piece
In preparing for something, I was reading the text of the Choice Act — that's the
financial deregulation bill the House recently passed (there's a link
in the piece
in the piece).
The
deregulation of the
financial system
in the 1980s, and the floating of the exchange rate and abolition of exchange controls
in 1983, were pivotal.
In what he expects to be the era of
financial deregulation under theTrump administration, Eisman said he's been loading up on
financial stocks, and «very long» on the stock market overall.
By the mid-1980s, central bankers had begun to enjoy a measure of success
in controlling inflation, not by strict regulation of the money supply, but as a byproduct of
financial deregulation and the liberalization of credit.
Today's talk is intended to be part of a vigorous debate currently going on
in the international community about which exchange rate regime should (and, more specifically, should not) be adopted
in emerging countries, with this particularly aimed at countries which are undergoing
financial deregulation.
While
financial deregulation a decade ago opened up the way for greater competition
in the provision of finance, the full impact was not felt until recent years, particularly for households.
Yet, there is room for disappointment if infrastructure improvement initiatives or
financial deregulation fails
in Congress.
Financial deregulation and the associated increase
in competition among lenders has also played a role by making loans cheaper, easier to obtain, particularly to investors, and providing innovations such as home equity loans and redraw facilities.
The Fourth area is more the field of ATTAC: all areas of
financial deregulation with an aim to tax free - flowing capital or to plan taxes of this type but also to attack pension funds as they become more widespread, or tax havens which play an important role
in the world economy.
From 1996,
in Korea, the government (amongst which 3 members especially) has tried to institutionalize a dramatic neo-liberal programme with privatisation and
deregulation in the
financial market.
And of course, all this would be with the general aim that all these measures of coercion linked to
financial deregulation would help recuperate funds which could go to the victims of the system, the countries of the South and those «without» or the unemployed
in the rich countries.
The
financial markets which have resulted from liberalisation,
deregulation and
financial globalisation, have their own time - frame which is not that of the value - creation process and less still creation itself, with the slow - downs, or, worse, the interruptions
in the returns process.
This activity has been spurred by the prevailing market ideology, by the concomitant
deregulation of the
financial markets and the growth of the
financial services industry and by the combination of a, fairly sluggish economy with a hot stock market that encourages paper profiteering rather than investment
in plant and product.
Large retailers met with politicians and regulators
in Canberra yesterday - a bit of media on this: Eli Greenblat, «Retailers lay down
deregulation gauntlet» (The Australian, 28 October 2014), Sue Mitchell and Matthew Knott, «Australian National Retailers Association condemns Harper review's «dangerous» competition law shake - up» (SMH, 27 October 2014) and Joanna Heath, «Retailers slam Harper change «drafted by lawyers» (The Australian
Financial Review, 27 October 2014 (paper version 28 October 2014, page 9)-RRB-
All these factors — a combination of
financial deregulation, ill thought out planning and housing policy and changes
in welfare — have resulted
in land and housing
in the UK becoming «financialised».
Deregulation and liberalisation have transformed several sectors
in Nigeria -
financial services; airlines and aviation; broadcasting and media - radio, television and newspapers; upstream petroleum; universities and polytechnics; and telecommunications.
Consider the counterexample of Canada — a mostly English - speaking country, every bit as much
in the American cultural orbit as Britain, but one where Reagan / Thatcher - type
financial deregulation never took hold.
They are conscious that many voters believed Labour had overspent
in the run - up to the 2008
financial crash, but McDonnell echoed Corbyn's claim
in a speech to the British Chambers of Commerce last week that
deregulation of the City was to blame.
There is also a very strong sense of America's drifting towards one of the worst
financial breakdowns
in recent history, as we know Clinton's repeal of the Glass - Steagall Act was already
in place by then, allowing
financial deregulations to flourish to the point of a worldwide economic collapse.
Driven by the
deregulation of the
financial system and removal of capital control, a solid growth
in corporate bond market, particularly bank bond issuance, was observed.
McLean & Nocera «s book is essential reading, and nicely traces the
financial crisis directly back to «innovation «& political neglect /
deregulation in the mortgage industry.]
Sweeping
deregulation plan targets consumer protection agency — A hearing
in Congress showcased the
Financial CHOICE Act, with proposals to strip the major powers of the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau... (See CFPB)
PLAYTIME is set across three cities defined by their role
in relation to capital: London, a city transformed by the
deregulation of the banks; Reykjavik, where the 2008 global
financial crisis began; and Dubai, one of the Middle East's burgeoning
financial markets.
Financial deregulation occurred so rapidly thereafter that
in 1985 fifteen new foreign banks entered and credit extended to the corporate sector grew 25 %
in the five years to 1989.
One of the most important points of
deregulation is the equivalent of our Rule 5.4, which prohibits non-lawyers from participating
in the
financial life of a law firm.
Their numbers grew
in the 1980s,
in part because of
financial deregulation that came with Big Bang
in 1986, which fuelled the increasing dominance of the City of London.
The sudden
deregulation of
financial markets
in England on October 27, 1986, has come to be called the «Big Bang,» and the coming introduction of ABSs
in England & Wales on October 6, 2011, has already been anointed as the legal profession's own explosion.
Oh, Wall Street, Bankers, Hedge Funds, and the
deregulation of the
financial industry wrecked the Western Economies's, particularly
in those countries
in Europe that don't want to build things (all countries
in Europe not called Germany, you know the trade union, single payer socialist country).
And whereas bad debts pervaded Japan's entire economy, Katz argued, the U.S. recession wasn't the result of structural flaws, but rather of excesses
in the
financial system that came from
deregulation and other policy mistakes that he sees as correctable.
Well, and I am making a few assumptions here, but my current understanding is that
deregulation would result
in some agents questioning their own
financial support for the current MLS system.