Banks are regulated because banking requires a certain amount of trust in the institution in which citizens place their savings. It's seen as a right of the public to have reassurance that their money is being handled responsibly and will be available to withdraw as needed.
They are being regulated because it is likely they will try to get more money from customers, which will put the economy out of shape
1. How were banks regulated between 1836 and the civil war?
Regulated companies were associations of merchants banded together for a common venture requires the company to have a licences and there are regulatory bodies that govern such company (government bodies that look after that industry) for public safety reasons. Jobs that require a licence are called regulated occupations. Regulated occupations include nurses, doctors, engineers, teachers, accountants and electricians. You need special education and experience before you can get your licence to work in most regulated occupations.
Banks have always been private. The government only wants control of them as of late. Banks did receive public insurance because of the run during the depression, but they have always been private, never a need to privatize.
Yes. banks can essentially set the rate of interest they choose to pay for money held in savings accounts to their customers
They are being regulated because it is likely they will try to get more money from customers, which will put the economy out of shape
Banks are regulated by a general set of regulations outlined in the United States law. Banks, for example, are regulated on the amount of APR they can set for loans. This keeps banks "in-cheque"(pun intended) and disallows them from taking advantage of people.
1. How were banks regulated between 1836 and the civil war?
1. How were banks regulated between 1836 and the civil war?
1. How were banks regulated between 1836 and the civil war?
Generally, banks are regulated by Federal laws. They often are federally chartered. Some banks are State chartered and State regulated. Therefore, that makes them vastly different that, say, a car dealership, or a pet store.
the banks went bankrupt
Despite the increasingly relaxed regulatory climate, U.S. state commercial banks are subject to a range of regulations at the state and federal level. In addition to the federal regulatory bodies that oversee national banks, each state.
Need more information - a typical regulated power supply would include dozens of resistors, each for one of several different reasons. Which resistor are you asking about?
Specialised banks are formed to cater specific needs of industries,export units etc.These are Foreign exchange banks,Industrial development banks,Export -import banks etc. Commercial banks are governed and regulated by Indian Banking Regulation Act 1949 and according to it banking means accepting deposits from public for the purpose of lending investment.
Regulated companies were associations of merchants banded together for a common venture requires the company to have a licences and there are regulatory bodies that govern such company (government bodies that look after that industry) for public safety reasons. Jobs that require a licence are called regulated occupations. Regulated occupations include nurses, doctors, engineers, teachers, accountants and electricians. You need special education and experience before you can get your licence to work in most regulated occupations.
Traditionally there is no real problem when the wealthy take risks with the assets of those with litle power. If the banks were regulated they would have to be regulated by laws created by the very people that take the risks with their deposits. and that would be socialism. ANSWER That won't happen - the banks are controlled by the same people that control the lawmakers and the economy. The U.S. economy has been controlled by the Federal Reserve since 1914. This is an illegal system that siphons power away from the voters and "We the People" that started this country. Things won't get better until there is another revolution in the U.S. Investigate the revolutionary ideas of U.S. Congressman Ron Paul and you will start to get the picture.