Editor's Note: This post has been removed from the Huffington Post....
Editor's Note: This post has been removed from the Huffington Post....
DK Matai | Posted 05.25.2011
Editor's Note: This post has been removed from the Huffington Post....
Tony Blankley | Posted 05.25.2011
In the end, the call for a systemic-risk regulator is yet another futile expression of faith in the power of government to out-think the markets. It is just another foolish bet.
HuffingtonPost.com | Shahien Nasiripour | Posted 05.25.2011
Members of Congress and the general public may not be told of "potential emerging threats to the stability of the financial system," thanks to a Thurs...
HuffingtonPost.com | Shahien Nasiripour | Posted 05.25.2011
The "Too Big To Fail" legislation currently being debated by a House committee has been widely criticized as toothless. But one provision gives the fe...
HuffingtonPost.com | Shahien Nasiripour | Posted 05.25.2011
If the White House and congressional leaders get their way, the vaunted new oversight council charged with overseeing systemic risk in the financial m...
Jill Schlesinger | Posted 05.25.2011
Rather than work together to improve the system, regulatory reform could become a classic political turf war. The problem is that once someone has the ball, he's reluctant to give it up.
Don McNay | Posted 05.25.2011
There has been talk about appointing a new "Systemic Risk Regulator." This "Super Czar" would oversee all of the financial services industry. We had a "Super Czar" last year. His name was Henry Paulson.
DK Matai | Posted 05.25.2011