证券监管机构的跨境合作

R. Silvers
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引用次数: 18

摘要

2001年9月11日的事件促使全球证券监管机构进行了大规模的跨境协调。9/11之后,国际证券委员会组织(IOSCO)制定了一项不具约束力的安排——《关于磋商、合作和信息交换的多边谅解备忘录》(MMoU),该备忘录标准化了参与证券监管机构之间信息共享的协议。由于不同国家的监管机构在不同的时间进入mmu,他们的加入造成了一系列交错的冲击。我使用这些冲击来表明,由此产生的跨境合作(a)增加了跨境执法,(b)降低了参与国资本市场流动性提供的成本。这些结果支持了mou有助于填补跨境监管空白的结论,这些空白历来使投资者面临信息不对称、代理成本和征用风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cross-Border Cooperation Between Securities Regulators
The events of September 11, 2001, prompted sweeping cross-border coordination efforts for securities regulators around the globe. After 9/11, the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) forged a nonbinding arrangement—the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding Concerning Consultation and Cooperation and the Exchange of Information (MMoU)—that standardized the protocol for information sharing among participating securities regulators. Because regulators from different countries entered the MMoU at different times, their enlistments created a set of staggered shocks. I use these shocks to show that the resulting cross-border cooperation (a) increases cross-border enforcement and (b) reduces the cost of liquidity provision in the capital markets of participating countries. These results support the conclusion that the MMoU helps fill gaps in cross-border regulation that historically exposed investors to information asymmetry, agency costs, and expropriation risks.
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