Regulatory
in sentence
1413 examples of Regulatory in a sentence
Since 2008, the
regulatory
approach taken by the US and the G20 has been geared toward increasing transparency and improving our understanding of possible systemic risks to the global financial system, not least those associated with climate change and fossil-fuel dependency.
Diametrically opposed spending, tax, monetary, and
regulatory
policies and proposals are proliferating.
This is reflected in the FSA costing less, in real terms, than the sum of its individual predecessor
regulatory
bodies.
Consistent and coherent standards can be set for regulated firms, differentiating between sectors only when it is appropriate to do so, and so reducing incentives for
regulatory
arbitrage.
Fourth, there are advantages for the
regulatory
regime, for the costs of regulation, and in preventing
regulatory
failures in making a single regulator clearly accountable against its statutory objectives.
The buck cannot be passed from one regulator to another if a
regulatory
failure occurs.
It must also consult publicly - including a cost benefit analysis - on proposed rules and
regulatory
guidance before issuing them; and must take account of the views of both a consumer panel and a practitioner panel established on a statutory basis.
Internally, bringing together different
regulatory
agencies to create a new integrated approach enhances innovation, because rather than simply follow the old practices of any predecessor agency, the best ideas are chosen.
As new issues arise the need and the ability to adopt a cross-sector perspective generates novel
regulatory
responses.
Meanwhile, constant and considerable innovation in the firms and markets the FSA regulates; the obligation on the FSA to be an open, transparent and consultative regulator, and to pay careful attention to the impact of its actions on competition and innovation; and participation in international discussions and negotiations all contribute to the FSA's development of a new, efficient, risk-based and innovative
regulatory
regime.
Beyond
regulatory
improvements, preventing payment incentives from rewarding reckless risk taking, and building Chinese walls between originators of securities and rating agencies, we need to discover what made this crisis so difficult to predict.
Global
regulatory
initiatives, particularly those aimed at standardizing accounting and other disclosure requirements, will be enforced vigorously.
At that point, they will put in place the
regulatory
or legal controls needed to reduce fossil-fuel use dramatically.
And lower profitability will reduce pay more effectively than any direct
regulatory
controls.
If they over-constrain the financial sector, risk may migrate outside the
regulatory
frontier, where it will be harder to measure and monitor.
That is why it is important to maintain some flexibility, to allow currently unregulated institutions like hedge funds and private-equity funds to be swept into the
regulatory
net if they become large and systemically important.
The second response consists in strengthening the banks through recapitalization, and removing the
regulatory
walls that separate national banking systems in order to limit overexposure to the risk of their own sovereign’s default.
The “info-monopolists” Google and Facebook, faced with few
regulatory
obstacles, have created unprecedented value for consumers – and have secured massive market power for themselves.
For them, any excuse will do, and EU Internal Market Commissioner Michel Barnier has provided them with ammunition by pursuing what many see as an excessively restrictive
regulatory
agenda.
Will they be pleased that London has stamped its collective foot, even though Cameron’s
regulatory
demands were not accepted?
It described an elaborate spider’s web of committees, councils, and agencies with overlapping responsibilities, unrepresentative memberships, and inadequate enforcement powers – a system built up incrementally over decades, with no guiding architectural hand or central authority to promote coherent global
regulatory
standards.
Yet consistent implementation is crucial to avoiding another
regulatory
“race to the bottom.”
They could be co-located in a
regulatory
Tower of Babel in Basel.
While the ECB has limited room for maneuver,
regulatory
changes and revenue-neutral shifts in the tax structure (for example, a temporary investment tax credit financed by a temporary increase in the corporate tax rate) could provide the stimulus needed to offset declining net exports.
Given that water and sanitation-infrastructure projects generally require substantial up-front capital investment, governments must ensure an appropriate
regulatory
framework and offer support to private investors.
Such agreements would, for example, limit opposition to patent applications; prohibit national
regulatory
authorities from approving generic medicines until patents have expired; maintain data exclusivity, thereby delaying the approval of biogeneric drugs; and require new forms of protection, such as anti-counterfeiting measures.
And the country’s other longstanding advantages – flexibility, capacity for renewal, economic mobility, international
regulatory
strength, and the world’s main reserve currency – remain in place.
A strong federal
regulatory
framework could help to ensure this result, while minimizing the environmental and safety risks associated with extraction.
The assurance that trading firms will receive fair
regulatory
and judicial treatment from member-state governments is essential; and the principle of nondiscrimination has been a tenet of the global trade system since its inception.
After having focused too much on demand management, Europe should be trying to reduce the fiscal and
regulatory
burden of the state, so that its economies can start growing again.
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