International Financial Architecture and International Financial Standards

The international financial architecture literature is concerned with a set of best principles and practices that may lower the risk of financial crises and spillover effects. The financial world has grown enormously more complicated since the end of Bretton Woods. The valuable work of several stand...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 2002-01, Vol.579 (1), p.183-199
Hauptverfasser: Fratianni, Michele, Pattison, John
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description The international financial architecture literature is concerned with a set of best principles and practices that may lower the risk of financial crises and spillover effects. The financial world has grown enormously more complicated since the end of Bretton Woods. The valuable work of several standard-setting institutions must be judged as minimum requirements for good practice, which are below the perceived needs of the leading financial centers. The paper proposes a "portal" solution, in which the two most important financial centers, the United States and the United Kingdom, set best practices on international financial standards. Since these two centers control access to international markets, and thus, are the conduit of systemic risk, they can establish both the rules for market access and the core regulatory and supervisory framework to deal with international systemic issues. The regulators of the two portals therefore play the fundamental international regulatory role.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/000271602128748679
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Architecture
Auditing standards
Bank loans
Banking crises
Banking regulation
Commercial regulation
Economic policy
Economic regulation
Economics
Finance
Financial institutions
Financial risk
Globalization
Governance
International Economic Organizations
International economic relations
International finance
International financial institutions
International relations
International trade
Monetary Policy
Monetary standards
Practice
Regulation
Regulatory arbitrage
Standardization
U.S.A
United Kingdom
World Economy
title International Financial Architecture and International Financial Standards
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