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Full-Text Articles in Law
Incorporating Macroprudential Financial Regulation Into Monetary Policy, Aaron Klein
Incorporating Macroprudential Financial Regulation Into Monetary Policy, Aaron Klein
Journal of Financial Crises
This paper proposes two insights into financial regulation and monetary policy. The first enhances understanding the relationship between them, building on the automobile metaphor that describes monetary policy: when to accelerate or brake for curves miles ahead. Enhancing the metaphor, financial markets are the transmission. In a financial crisis, markets cease to function, equivalent to a transmission shifting into neutral. This explains both monetary policy’s diminished effectiveness in stimulating the economy and why the financial crisis shock to real economic output greatly exceeded central bank forecasts.
The second insight is that both excess leverage and fundamental mispricing of asset values …
A Good Rule, Poorly Written: How The Financial Crisis Highlighted The Inadequacy Of Iolta Rate Rules, Andrew Arthur
A Good Rule, Poorly Written: How The Financial Crisis Highlighted The Inadequacy Of Iolta Rate Rules, Andrew Arthur
Catholic University Law Review
Interest on lawyer trust accounts (IOLTA) provide a substantial component of funding that is used to provide legal aid to needy individuals throughout the United States. However, IOLTA program revenues fluctuate with the deposit interest rates, which have remained near zero after the onset of the 2008 global financial crisis. The Comment examines IOLTA rate rules across the country, and the impact of reduces IOLTA revenues on legal aid programs. The Comment further asserts that IOLTA rate rules are not adequately designed to account for fluctuation in central bank interest rates, causing unanticipated problems for legal aid funding. Finally, the …
The Illegal Actions Of The Federal Reserve: An Analysis Of How The Nation's Central Bank Has Acted Outside The Law In Responding To The Current Financial Crisis, Chad Emerson
William & Mary Business Law Review
No abstract provided.
Losing Control: Why Imf Article Viii(2)(B) May Nullify The Enforceability Of Financing Contracts When Spiraling Oil Prices Prompt The Use Of Exchange Controls, David Litvack
Fordham Journal of Corporate & Financial Law
No abstract provided.
Towards A Sovereign Debt Work-Out System;, Rory Macmillan
Towards A Sovereign Debt Work-Out System;, Rory Macmillan
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business
In a future sovereign debt crisis, debt restructurings are inevitable simply because there is no alternative. Private lending becomes simply unavailable. The commercial banks were asked to lend to Mexico in early 1995 as part of the U.S. Government rescue plan, but the money never materialized.3 The banks' experience of involuntary lending during the 1980s debt crisis was so unpleasant that they are unlikely to increase exposure to a troubled debtor in a crisis today. Other sources of finance are no more likely to yield support. Mexico was unable to return to the capital markets until six months after the …
Restructuring Strategies For Mexican Eurobond Debt, Duncan N. Darrow, Peter V. Darrow, Douglas A. Doetsch, Miguel Jauregui-Rojas
Restructuring Strategies For Mexican Eurobond Debt, Duncan N. Darrow, Peter V. Darrow, Douglas A. Doetsch, Miguel Jauregui-Rojas
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business
Unless the international capital markets become widely receptive to refinancing Mexican Eurobonds, by early to mid 1996, the holders of these Eurobonds - Mexico's new "bondholder constituency" - may find themselves at the center of a restructuring process encompassing a significant portion of the $13 billion of Eurobond debt outstanding. This article discusses strategies for restructuring.
Mexico's Banks After The December 1994 Devaluation--A Chronology Of The Government's Response, Roy A. Karaoglan, Mike Lubrano
Mexico's Banks After The December 1994 Devaluation--A Chronology Of The Government's Response, Roy A. Karaoglan, Mike Lubrano
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business
The immediate effects of the December 1994 peso devaluation and the period of high interest rates and economic recession that followed had important repercussions for the Mexican banking and financial system. Since the onset of the crisis, the Mexican government has undertaken a number of important actions designed to assure adequate capitalization of financial institutions and continued public confidence in the banking system. The goal throughout has been to avoid a banking crisis that would exacerbate the contraction in the real economy and to set the stage for a recovery of the financial system based on sound institutions and efficient …