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[26 Oct 2009 ]
Is It Fair to Blame Fair Value Accounting for the Financial Crisis? [HBR]

After explaining the controversy, Pozen proposes a solution: new, transparent practices that would draw on the best of both historical cost and fair value accounting. If adopted, they could balance the banks’ desire to present assets in a good light with investors’ need to understand the banks’ exposures – and perhaps make everyone happy.

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[16 Oct 2009 ]
Mortgage Relief: A Better Approach [Harvard Business]

Back in February, the Obama Administration committed $75 billion to make mortgages more affordable to homeowners under financial pressure. Last week, however, the Congressional Oversight Panel for the financial bailout criticized the design of this mortgage modification program, and declared that “in the best case” it would prevent half as many foreclosures as the Administration predicted.

Pozen proposes a different kind of principal reduction program instead of the current mortgage modification program.

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[12 Oct 2009 ]
Too Big to Save?

Industry luminary Robert Pozen offers his insights on the future of U.S. finance

(With foreward by Robert J. Shiller, Yale University)

The recent credit crisis and the resulting bailout program are unprecedented events in the financial industry. While it’s important to understand what got us here, it’s even more important to consider how we should get out. While there is little question that immediate action was required to stabilize the situation, it is now time to look for a long-term ..read more

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[11 Oct 2009 ]
The Bernie Madoff Law: A Closer Look  [Harvard Business]

The House Banking Committee has just finished drafting a bill intended to stop anyone in the future from putting together another Bernie Madoff scam. It’s a worthy aim that I wholly endorse, but I worry that passing the current draft will introduce more arbitrariness and cost into the regulatory system without solving the problems revealed by the Madoff debacle.

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[10 Oct 2009 ]
Making the ‘public option’ a simple one [Boston Globe]

Within the context of state-based Connectors implementing the individual mandate, the most viable definition of the public option is a state-based health care plan currently serving governmental employees. That approach would sidestep the ideological debate, while helping to achieve the consensus goal of constraining health care costs.