Senin, 02 Desember 2013

The financial crisis of 2007, which resulted from insufficient consumer financial protection in the US, conflicts of interest in the credit rating agency industry, and defective transparency requirements in derivatives markets,[14] triggered a massive rise in corporate insolvencies. Contemporary debate, particularly in the banking sector, has shifted to prevention of insolvencies, by scrutinising excessive pay, conflicts of interest among financial services institutions, capital adequacy, and the causes of excessive risk taking. The Banking Act 2009 created a special insolvency regime for banks, called the special resolution regime, envisaging that banks will be taken over by the government in extreme circumstances.
Corporate insolvency
See also: UK bankruptcy law, Bankruptcy in the United States, and List of corporate collapses and scandals
Corporate liquidations spiked after the financial crisis of 2007-2008, after a pre-crisis norm of around 13,000 per year.

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