Apeculiar characteristic of financial regulation today, and one of the causes of its failure, has been the divergence of theory and practice.
Recent proposals by regulatory and banking lobbies appear to be continuing this divergence. In theory, it is generally accepted that the core purpose of financial regulation is to mitigate systemic risks, such as a global credit crunch. In practice, however, the regulatory rules are focused entirely on risk-taking by individual firms.

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