New podcast on the Federal Reserve with Sir Paul Tucker. Judge rules against New York in Exxon securities fraud case.
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December 11, 2019
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Judge Rules Against New York in Exxon Securities Fraud Case ([link removed] )
New York loses a climate-change securities fraud suit that should never have been brought.
- Judge Rules Against New York in Exxon Securities Fraud Case ([link removed] )
By Walter Olson
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Politics, Fed Independence, and Paul Volcker ([link removed] )
The Federal Reserve is nominally independent, but the enormous pressure often aimed at Fed chairs past indicates that it's not that simple. Sir Paul Tucker is author of Unelected Power: The Quest for Legitimacy in Central Banking and the Regulatory State.
- Podcast: Politics, Fed Independence, and Paul Volcker ([link removed] )
Featuring Sir Paul Tucker and Caleb O. Brown
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FEATURED ARTICLES
NDAA 2020: Congress Neglects Its Responsibility Once Again ([link removed] )
Amidst the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act's usual mix of bloat and fiscal irresponsibility resides a greater omission: Congress continues to evade its responsibility to oversee the nation's wars.
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Why There Has Been No Great Reversal in U.S. Banking ([link removed] )
Philippon’s diagnosis of uncompetitive markets may be accurate for U.S. finance, but for reasons to do with government intervention rather than the absence of competitive enforcement by government.
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Vox Misses Mark on Institutional Primacy in Contemporary Federal Policymaking ([link removed] )
Some argue that the courts have become too powerful during times when Congress is subject to gridlock, but that's hardly the case, because the president is the undisputed policymaker-in-chief of the United States government.
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