Citation:
David Slattery and Joseph G. Nellis, Rethinking the Role of Regulation in the Aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis: The Case of the UK, PANOECONOMICUS, 2011, 3, pages 407-423
Abstract:
Following the global financial crisis, many countries have embarked on
fundamental reviews of their regulatory systems in an attempt to identify the
causes of the near collapse in financial systems and to pave the way for a new
approach to regulation. The focus of this paper concerns the intellectual
assumptions on which previous regulatory approaches have largely been built,
both in the UK and in a number of other countries. We examine the analysis
provided by the UK's Turner Review (2009) which follows the "market failure"
approach to regulation and we contrast this with the alternative "state failure"
approach. Both approaches only offer partial and polarised views into the causes
of the crisis. We offer a synthesis and argue that a new conceptual approach to
the management of financial markets is required. The essence of this new
approach is the recognition that the state and regulation are not external to
the market. While this paper largely relates to the UK, it provides potentially
important lessons for many other countries.