Regulating for Stability:Bank Capitalisation and the Emergence of an International Lender of Last Resort
The recent financial crisis has inevitably given rise to a major and widespread debate on bank regulation. But most of the academics in the fray—including scholars eager to revive Keyness remedies in a post-gold standard era—aim to correct the crises of the past. From a rhetorical perspective, their arguments sound plausible because the ideas of intellectuals and practical men that academics seek to convince have been formed by past crises.1 And, from a methodological perspective, the appeal to redress the crises of the past fits in with the severely empirical canons of investigation that have characterized economics since the mid-twentieth century.
Jan Toporowski
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
国际会议
北京
英文
152-166
2010-11-01(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)