ABSTRACT

In light of on-going global financial crises, the institutional structure of financial regulation is currently a subject of significant academic and practical interest. The financial crisis has called into question the adequacy of financial regulation at the national and supranational levels, and has instigated financial regulatory reforms in major markets overseas. This has included the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act in the US, and the programme to split the Financial Services Authority in the UK.

This book examines the institutional structure reform of financial regulation from a comparative perspective, exploring both fundamental theories and international experiences. The book explores the three main institutional structures of financial regulation in the world; the sectors-based model, adopted in the US, Mainland China and Hong Kong; the twin-peaks model with Australia and the Netherlands as its pioneers; and the single-regulator model as represented by the former Financial Services Authority in the UK and the Financial Services Agency in Japan.

The book contains contributions from renowned experts in the field of financial regulation including Douglas Arner, Jeffrey Carmichael, Robin Hui Huang, Dirk Schoenmaker, and Michael Taylor, and will be of interest to students and researchers of banking and finance law, and comparative economics.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|94 pages

Fundamental theories

chapter 1|20 pages

Regulatory reform after the financial crisis

Twin Peaks revisited

chapter 2|11 pages

Financial stability and proper business conduct

Can supervisory structure help to achieve these objectives?

chapter 4|35 pages

Helping hand or grabbing hand?

Supervisory architecture, financial structure and market view*

part II|158 pages

International experiences

chapter 5|6 pages

Implementing Twin Peaks

Lessons from Australia

chapter 7|29 pages

One step forward, two steps back?

The institutional structure of US financial services regulation after the crisis of 2008

chapter 9|42 pages

Financial regulatory structure in Hong Kong

Looking forward

chapter 10|27 pages

Institutional structure of financial regulation in China

Where is it now and where is it heading?*