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Part 6 The Financial Institutions Industry
G L O B A L
International Financial Regulation
Because asymmetric information problems in the
banking industry are a fact of life throughout the
world, financial regulation in other countries is similar
to that in the United States. Financial institutions are
chartered and supervised by government regulators,
just as they are in the United States. Disclosure
requirements for financial institutions and corpora-
tions issuing securities are similar in other developed
countries. Deposit insurance is also a feature of the
regulatory systems in most other countries, although
its coverage is often smaller than in the United States
and is intentionally not advertised. We have also
seen that capital requirements are in the process of
being standardized across countries with agreements
like the Basel Accord.
Particular problems in financial regulation occur
when financial institutions operate in many countries
and thus can readily shift their business from one coun-
try to another. Financial regulators closely examine the
domestic operations of financial institutions in their
country, but they often do not have the knowledge or
ability to keep a close watch on operations in other
countries, either by domestic institutions’ foreign affili-
ates or by foreign institutions with domestic branches.
In addition, when a financial institution operates in
many countries, it is not always clear which national
regulatory authority should have primary responsibility
for keeping the institution from engaging in overly
risky activities.
The difficulties inherent in international financial
regulation were highlighted by the collapse of the
Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI).
BCCI, which was operating in more than 70 coun-
tries, including the United States and the United
Kingdom, was supervised by Luxembourg, a tiny
country unlikely to be up to the task. When massive
fraud was discovered, the Bank of England closed
BCCI down, but not before depositors and stockhold-
ers were exposed to huge losses. Cooperation among
regulators in different countries and standardization of
regulatory requirements provide potential solutions to
the problems of international financial regulation. The
world has been moving in this direction through
agreements like the Basel Accord and oversight pro-
cedures announced by the Basel Committee in July
1992, which require a bank’s worldwide operations
to be under the scrutiny of a single home-country reg-
ulator with enhanced powers to acquire information
on the bank’s activities. Also, the Basel Committee
ruled that regulators in other countries can restrict the
operations of a foreign bank if they feel that it lacks
effective oversight. Whether agreements of this type
will solve the problem of international financial regula-
tion in the future is an open question.
taking. In addition, regulated firms may lobby politicians to lean on regulators and
supervisors to go easy on them. For all these reasons, there is no guarantee that
regulators and supervisors will be successful in promoting a healthy financial sys-
tem. These same problems bedevil financial regulators in other countries besides
the United States, as the Global box, “International Financial Regulation,”
indicates. Indeed, as we will see, financial regulation and supervision have not
always worked well, leading to banking crises in the United States and through-
out the world.
Because so many laws regulating the financial system have been passed in the
United States, it is hard to keep track of them all. As a study aid, Table 18.1 lists
the major financial legislation since the beginning of the 20th century and its
key provisions.
Chapter 18 Financial Regulation
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