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The New Laws and Regulations for Financial Conglomerates: Will They Better Manage the Risks than the Previous Ones?Elizabeth F. BrownGeorgia State University - Department of Risk Management and Insurance May 12, 2011 American University Law Review, Vol. 60, 2011 Abstract: Federal and state laws allow U.S. financial conglomerates to own securities, insurance and depository institutions through a holding company structure. Before the recent crisis, the federal or state agency responsible for regulating a financial conglomerate as a whole was determined by what subsidiaries that the holding company owned. For example, the Office of Thrift Supervision supervised AIG, instead of the Federal Reserve because it owned a thrift, not a bank. This article discusses how the different financial conglomerate regulations contributed to the recent financial crisis and whether the reforms in the financial regulatory reform legislation in Congress corrects these problems.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 77 Keywords: Financial Regulation, Financial Conglomerates, Holding Companies, Too Big Too Fail, Regulatory Reform, Dodd-Frank Act JEL Classification: E44, G18, G21, G22, G24, G28, K22, K23, L22 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: June 17, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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