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Why Financial Deregulation?

Ian R. Harper

Australian Economic Review, 1986, vol. 19, issue 1, 37-49

Abstract: Over the past six years, financial markets in Australia have been deregulated almost completely. This article attempts to explain why Australia's financial markets have been deregulated and why financial deregulation has occurred so quickly. It suggests the answers lie in changed perceptions of the usefulness of regulation as a means to specific ends. Exogenous developments in the financial environment altered the impact of regulations on financial institutions. The result was a weakening in the competitive position of regulated financial institutions relative to unregulated financial institutions and direct financiers. This led simultaneously to a reduction in the ability of the monetary authorities to control the growth of total financing and a growing perception amongst regulated institutions that the costs of regulated status outweighed the benefits. The rapid demise of the regulations can be traced to the joint realisation by the monetary authorities and the regulated institutions that the regulations no longer served their respective ends. This conjunction of ‘public interest’ and ‘private interest’ in financial deregulation can in turn be traced to the unique ability of financial markets to generate close substitutes for existing financial products at low cost.

Date: 1986
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (10)

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https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8462.1986.tb00606.x

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