Federal Reserve nominee Jerome Powell got into a heated
debate over bank regulation with Senator Elizabeth Warren Tuesday.
Not exact matches
Carney, who now leads the
Bank of England, has inserted himself into the global
debate over what to do about climate change.
When the leaders of the world's major economies convene in Toronto on June 26, their schedule will be laden with big issues, from ending stimulus spending to the European debt crisis to the
debate over a global
bank tax.
But the
banking giant isn't ready to pick a side in the industry's raging
debate over Bitcoin's future.
The
debate prior to this crisis can be (perhaps simplistically) characterised as between those who argued that an inflation - targeting central
bank should care about asset prices to the extent that they affected the forecasts of output and inflation
over the policy horizon, and those who argued that additional attention needed to be paid to asset prices and the possibility of credit imbalances.
The fact that Federal Reserve policy statements are pored
over by investors was driven home once again when the removal of two words from the prior statement set off an intense
debate over the central
bank's view of risks to the economy.
Without stronger regulation, which is currently up for
debate in the Senate, Wall Street and the big
banks will take taxpayers and consumers to the cleaners all
over again.
TALKING THE TALK Aside from their discussion
over the stance of monetary policy, officials likely continued to
debate fine - tuning their communications strategy by adopting numerical thresholds for economic variables that would guide the central
bank's unconventional stimulus.
Central
banking and the
debate over central planning passed each other like two ships in the night in the early 1900s.
We already knew that Germans were complaining about the impact of the post-crisis regulatory framework in the small savings and cooperative
banks of the country, and that this was reflected to an extent by the
debate in the US
over the slow disappearance of their small regional
banks (while large
banks kept growing).
And when the
debate over 421 - a heated up in Albany in 2015, City Hall reached out to Spinola,
Banks and James Whelan, REBNY's executive vice president, to see if the group could get state lawmakers to call reporters writing about the abatement.
We can quibble
over policy and strategic details: the way in which the
debate on immigration is following the welfare
debate is becoming divorced from fact; the persistent failure of
banking «reform» to get to the fundamental issues; and the possibility that the government's dearth of competence may be a weaker spot than their closeness to fat cat Britain.
The
debate over online
banking and mobile
banking security continues with both sides making a case for technology as either the strength or the potential flaw in their capacity to protect users.
Whether you are newly married or you've been married for 20 years, the
debate over joint versus separate
bank accounts is a hot topic among married couples.
There is a great
debate over whether the two divisions of the
banking sector should operate under one roof, or if the two are best kept separate.
As
banks press for deregulation, the
debate over whether high
bank capital standards are inhibiting loan growth has taken center stage.
Although lawmakers like to
debate over rules that would make credit scores free to consumers, it still costs money to see the same three - digit numbers that
banks use to determine creditworthiness.
Joint Checking Accounts for Married Couples: The Great
Debate Over Joint vs. Separate Bank Accounts Ben join the debate with his method of making the joint account works for co
Debate Over Joint vs. Separate
Bank Accounts Ben join the
debate with his method of making the joint account works for co
debate with his method of making the joint account works for couples.
For all the intense
debate over the number of police officers, virtually no mention of fraud was made by any politician during the election campaign and its aftermath — despite ONS figures showing that 4.5 % of all adults were a victim of
bank or credit card fraud, by far the most common crime affecting adults in Britain.
Whether this is a good criteria or not might be tested by looking at a good cross-section of other historical cross-border
debates, notably with the Swiss
over banking records, and contrasting the current and recent cases with long - standing practice.
Comments from Kevin Watters, CEO of Chase Mortgage
Banking, earlier this week that the Federal Housing Administration's loan requirements look an awful lot like subprime lending incited quite the
debate on social media
over what exactly is subprime lending.