Accountability arrangements for financial sector regulators / Eva Hüpkes, Marc Quintyn, and Michael W. Taylor.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781451935639
- 1451935633
- Banks and banking, Central
- Banks and banking -- State supervision
- Monetary policy
- Public administration
- Banques centrales
- Banques -- Contrôle de l'État
- Politique monétaire
- Administration publique (Science)
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Banks & Banking
- Banks and banking, Central
- Banks and banking -- State supervision
- Monetary policy
- Public administration
- Centrale banken
- Aansprakelijkheid
- Monetaire politiek
- 332.152 22
- HG1811 .H87 2006eb
- 83.50
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
"This pamphlet, prepared by David Cheney, is a companion piece to Economic Issue No. 32, "Should Financial Sector Regulators Be Independent?" which is available on the IMF's website. It is based on IMF Working Paper 05/51, "The Accountability of Financial Sector Supervisors: Principles and Practice," by Eva Hüpkes, Marc Quintyn, and Michael W. Taylor"--Preface.
Print version record.
Policymakers are often reluctant to grant independence to the agencies that regulate and supervise the financial sector because of the fear that these agencies, with their wide-ranging responsibilities and powers, could become a law unto themselves. This pamphlet describes mechanisms for making regulatory agencies accountable not only to the government but also to the industry they supervise and the public at large, with examples from a range of countries.
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