Governance Implications of the Global Financial Crisis: United States Experience |
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Authors: | Thomas H. Stanton |
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Affiliation: | (1) Johns Hopkins University, Center for the Study of American Government, 900 Seventh Street, NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20001, USA |
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Abstract: | In the financial debacle, public and private organizations failed to protect owners and stakeholders from calamity. Given the immense financial bubble, could improved governance have made a difference? Many large complex financial institutions may not be sufficiently governable to avoid unpleasant major surprises. Ponderous processes of enacting laws and regulations, and the substantial influence of powerful stakeholders in those processes, mean that fluid markets are likely to mitigate or even avoid the impact of regulatory improvements that policymakers suggest. Better information must flow to decision makers, but the dynamics of a bubble may impede effective risk management by financial firms and government. |
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