The
authors argue that the current financial
crisis is a result of the radical financial
deregulation process that began in the
late 1970s. This evolution has taken the
form of cycles in which deregulation accompanied
by rapid financial innovation stimulates
powerful financial booms that end in crises.
Governments respond to crises with bailouts
that allow new expansions to begin. As
a result, financial markets have become
ever large and financial crises have become
more threatening to society, which forces
governments to enact ever larger bailouts.
In this paper the authors have analyzed
a series of structural flaws in the current
financial system that helped bring on
the current crisis, and then proposed
a nine point regulation policy designed
to end this destructive dynamic.
October 22, 2008.
This paper was originally published as
a working paper, Working Paper Series,
No: 181, Political Economy Research institute
(PERI), University of Massachusetts. |