The Need for Competition in International Securities Regulation
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Roberta Romano
This article advocates opening up international securities regulation to greater regulatory competition than the scant competition that exists at present. After sketching the contours of an international regime of regulatory competition in securities laws and the reasons why such competition is desirable, the article provides a detailed response to objections that have been raised to a proposal for a competitive securities regime that was principally focused on the United States, objections that would accordingly also be raised against this article’s proposal. These include whether the U.S. securities regime is directed at mitigating problems regarding disclosure of interfirm externalities and whether international competition will result in a regulatory race to the lowest level of disclosure. Because the analysis in support of regulatory competition in securities law draws upon the learning regarding competition across U.S. states over the production of corporate law, which has been successful in creating a regime that, on balance, benefits shareholders, the article concludes by demonstrating that recent critiques of the efficacy of state-charter competition are unfounded.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- The Need for Competition in International Securities Regulation
- The Issuer Choice Debate
- Assessing Regulatory Responses to Securities Market Globalization
- Centralization, Competition, and Privatization in Financial Regulation
- David's Dilemma: A Case Study of Securities Regulation in a Small Open Market
- Greenhorns, Yankees, and Cosmopolitans: Venture Capital, IPOs, Foreign Firms, and U.S. Markets
- Incomplete Contracts Theories of the Firm and Comparative Corporate Governance
- Sales and Elections as Methods for Transferring Corporate Control
- Voting (Insincerely) in Corporate Law
- Is Stock Manipulation Bad? Questioning the Conventional Wisdom with Evidence from the Israeli Experience
- Open Market Repurchases: Signaling or Managerial Opportunism?
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- The Need for Competition in International Securities Regulation
- The Issuer Choice Debate
- Assessing Regulatory Responses to Securities Market Globalization
- Centralization, Competition, and Privatization in Financial Regulation
- David's Dilemma: A Case Study of Securities Regulation in a Small Open Market
- Greenhorns, Yankees, and Cosmopolitans: Venture Capital, IPOs, Foreign Firms, and U.S. Markets
- Incomplete Contracts Theories of the Firm and Comparative Corporate Governance
- Sales and Elections as Methods for Transferring Corporate Control
- Voting (Insincerely) in Corporate Law
- Is Stock Manipulation Bad? Questioning the Conventional Wisdom with Evidence from the Israeli Experience
- Open Market Repurchases: Signaling or Managerial Opportunism?