ABOUT THE BOOK

image not available

    Accession Number

 B212

    Title

 Implementing Financial Regulation: Theory And Practice

    Author

 Gray, Joanna/ Hamilton, Jenny

    Publisher

 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

    ISBN

 0-470-86929-1

     Summary

Implementing Financial Regulation: Theory and Practice examines the most important aspects of the UK financial regulatory environment introduced by the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. These aspects are firstly, the move towards risk-based regulation and in particular FSA’s risk-based operating framework for supervision; secondly, the trend towards direct regulation of individuals within financial services businesses and in particular senior managers ; and thirdly how regulatory rhetoric and action have changed over the last twenty years to mirror the re-drawing of the boundary between collectively and personal responsibility that has led to increasing emphasis on financial citizenship and personal financial autonomy that has taken place over the same period. Highlights include: • What does (and should) risk-based regulation mean? How does FSA interpret and use conceptions of “risk”? • How FSMA 2000 and the FSA Handbook have built a bespoke governance regime for the finance sector regulatory apparatus governing senior management responsibility, arrangements, systems and control? • How is the regulatory regime with its increase emphasis on issues internal to the business of governance, organization and performance by key individual staff being made to “bite” at the level of FSA enforcement against firms and individuals? • Can regulation and regulators employ their techniques to empower and enable individual financial citizens to make rational choices faced with a dizzying array of (increasingly directly regulated) products and services? The book aims to explain and critique each of these features in terms of broader trends in thinking and practice about regulation and the appropriate individual allocation of risk and governance responsibilities in some other areas of business law. It asks whether insights provided by social theorists into both the possibilities and limits of regulation can aid understanding of some of these more novel features of the UK financial regulatory landscape.