Archive for the ‘Credit Crisis’ Category

How to make a bank raise equity

Monday, February 8th, 2010

By Oliver Hart and Luigi Zingales
FT.com, February 7th, 2010

In the struggle to identify how to avoid a repeat of last year’s financial crisis there is an emerging consensus among regulators, academics and practitioners that contingent convertible (Coco) bonds are the way to go. The idea is to have some debt in the capital structure of banks that converts into equity when a bank faces financial distress.

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Return Our Investment

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

By Douglas Diamond and Anil K Kashyap
The New York Times, Op-ed

WALL STREET is considering legal action to prevent President Obama from imposing a new tax on bailed-out financial institutions. Because the law that created the Troubled Asset Relief Program compels the government to recoup the bailout money, it’s unlikely that banks will succeed in avoiding recompense. So rather than debate the constitutionality of the proposed tax, it is far more productive to design the best possible repayment plan.

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Faculty Panel on Ethics

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Professors Steven Kaplan, Tobias Moskowitz, and Luigi Zingales discuss the ethics and the role of ethics on Wall Street, in the past, the present, and going into the future.

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Should Executive Pay Be Regulated?

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Myron Scholes Forum, December 3, 2009

Professor Steven N. Kaplan discusses (1) whether CEO pay is out of control; (2) the role of pay at banks and financial firms in regard to the financial crisis; and (3) whether proposed new regulations and caps make sense.

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A Tax on Short-term Debt Would Stabilize the System

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

By Luigi Zingales
FT.com, December 16th, 2009

The idea of imposing a tax on financial transactions, also called the Tobin tax after the economist who first proposed it, is back in vogue. It has strong political appeal, catering to demands to punish banks for the crisis they have bestowed. It satisfies the political need to do something to avoid a repeat of the crisis. And, at a time of fiscal crisis, it provides an easy way to raise revenues without increasing income taxes. Last Friday, European Union leaders urged the International Monetary Fund to consider such a tax.

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Should Banker Pay be Regulated?

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

By Steven N. Kaplan
The Economists’ Voice

Pay structures weren’t the problem, argues Steven Kaplan, who suggests that contingent equity is a better way to avoid bailouts.

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Oil and the Macroeconomy: Lessons for Monetary Policy

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

By Ethan Harris, Bruce Kasman, Matthew Shapiro, and Kenneth West
This paper was prepared for the 2009 conference of the US Monetary Policy Forum (USMPF).

This report examines the role of oil in the macroeconomy with the aim of evaluating and guiding central bank responses to oil price movements.

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The Fed Is Already Transparent

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

By Anil K. Kashyap and Frederic S. Mishkin
Wall Street Journal, November 9, 2009

Anil Kashyap and Frederic Mishkin discuss the Federal Reserve’s independence and the impact of  the Congressman Ron Paul’s bill (H. R. 1207).  They also explore an amendment that would mitigate the negative consequences of Congressman Paul’s bill.

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Inflation or Deflation?

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Myron Scholes Forum, October 28th, 2009

Chicago Booth Professor, John Cochrane, uses the money demand equation and valuation equation of government debt to understand fiscal and monetary policy in 2008-2009, to think about whether the US is headed for fiscal inflation and to think about what that inflation might look like.

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For additonal information, please refer to Professor Cochrane’s webpage.

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Executive Pay: This house believes that on the whole, senior executives are worth what they are paid.

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

By Steven N. Kaplan
Economist.com;Economist Debates

On the question of whether “senior executives are worth what they are paid,” Professor Steven N Kaplan of Chicago Booth and Nell Minow, Editor and Co-founder of The Corporate Library, argue opposing sides in a live debate on Economist.com, beginning October 20th.

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