Should Financial Sector Regulators Be Independent? [electronic resource] / Michael Taylor.
Material type: TextSeries: Economic Issues; Economic Issues ; No. 32Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2004Description: 1 online resource (27 p.)ISBN: 1589063147 :ISSN: 1020-8402Subject(s): Central Bank | Financial Institutions | Financial Sector | Financial Stability | Inflation | Monetary PolicyAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Should Financial Sector Regulators Be Independent?Online resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: In nearly every major financial crisis of the past decade-from East Asia to Russia, Turkey, and Latin America-political interference in financial sector regulation helped make a bad situation worse. Political pressures not only weakened financial regulation, but also hindered regulators and supervisors from taking action against troubled banks. This paper investigates why, to fulfill their mandate to preserve financial sector stability, financial sector regulators and supervisors need to be independent-from the financial services industry as well as from the government-as well as accountable.In nearly every major financial crisis of the past decade-from East Asia to Russia, Turkey, and Latin America-political interference in financial sector regulation helped make a bad situation worse. Political pressures not only weakened financial regulation, but also hindered regulators and supervisors from taking action against troubled banks. This paper investigates why, to fulfill their mandate to preserve financial sector stability, financial sector regulators and supervisors need to be independent-from the financial services industry as well as from the government-as well as accountable.
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