衍生品与放松管制

Derivatives and Deregulation

ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY · 2014
被引 120
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究利率和外汇互换如何绕过监管分类,削弱1933年《格拉斯-斯蒂格尔法案》对商业银行与投资银行的分离,并理论化模糊创新对监管现状的颠覆作用。

Abstract

Regulators, much like market actors, rely on categorical distinctions. Innovations that are ambiguous to regulatory categories but not to market actors present a problem for regulators and an opportunity for innovative firms. Using a wide range of primary and secondary, qualitative and quantitative sources, we trace the history of one class of innovative financial derivatives—interest rate and foreign exchange swaps—to show how these instruments undermined the separation of commercial and investment banking established by the Glass–Steagall Act of 1933 even as overt political action failed to do so. Swaps did not fit neatly into existing product categories—futures, securities, loans—and thus evaded regulatory scrutiny for many years. The market success of swaps put commercial and investment banks into direct competition and, in so doing, undermined Glass–Steagall. Drawing on this case, we theorize that ambiguous innovations may disrupt the regulatory status quo and shift the political burden onto parties that want to maintain existing regulations. Our findings also suggest that category-spanning innovations may be more valuable to market participants if regulators find them difficult to interpret.

金融监管金融创新投资银行衍生品市场政治经济学