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Growing out of the crisis through prudential regulation of large financial institutions and redefined government responsibilities

27 Oct 2011

I consider in this paper the challenges and pitfalls we must face to grow out for good of the recent and latent financial crisis and economic recession. I consider a brief history of the crisis and insist on the loss of confidence within the banking and financial sector, which propagated later to the real sector. I discuss ways to rebuild confidence and move out of a stable bad economic equilibrium, due in part to inefficiently designed bonus systems. Considering data on gross job creation and loss in the private sector, I challenge the sorcerer's apprentices in reforming capitalism and I recall the role of creative destruction. I show that government deficits and economic growth are not good friends and I offer a reference to the Canadian experience of the two decades 1985-2005. Finally, I discuss fiscal reforms and renewed roles for governmental and competitive sectors in generating a more prosperous economy as well as some specific challenges we are facing today, in particular to redesign the regulatory framework of the financial sector.
government politics economics economy financial crisis finance investment business employment financial institutions interest investments labour risk securities uncertainty unemployment market bank mortgage government budget fiscal reforms global financial crisis, 2008-2009 prudential regulation confidence creative destruction loan market financial fannie mae federal reserve system asset-backed security collateralized debt obligation fannie mae american international group the financial crisis freddie mac competitive social-democracy

Authors

Boyer, Marcel

Pages
53
Published in
Canada

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