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Aspen Institute Issues Report on Business and Academic Leaders’ Proposals to Prevent Future Economic Crises

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The Aspen Institute Center for Business Education has issued a report detailing recommendations for business and government action to address the economic crisis from a group of business leaders, top business and law faculty, and senior representatives from the investment and foundation worlds. Based on the proceedings of a roundtable that was held in collaboration with New York University Stern School of Business and with support from Ernst & Young, the report explores this distinguished group's suggestions, including

  • Creating a systemic risk regulator
  • Pricing systemic risk
  • Limiting the destructive capacity of derivatives
  • Fostering a long-term focus in business

Taking part in the discussion were former SEC Chairman William H. Donaldson, NYU Stern School of Business Dean Thomas Cooley, Columbia Business School professor Amar Bhidé and Columbia Law professor John Coffee, as well as other leading representatives from academia, business, institutional investment, and the foundation world. A full list of attendees is attached to this release.

Participants at the roundtable also discussed how business and law faculty can give their students a nuanced understanding of complex market mechanisms, and instill a sense of professional integrity. They urged academics to engage with the popular media, and called on them to think critically about how the models and approaches that dominate academic thinking and research on financial and economic topics might have contributed to the crisis.

The Aspen Institute is well known for convening leading thinkers and providing thought leadership on issues that are critical to public debate. Aspen's Center for Business Education (AspenCBE.org) specializes in topics at the intersection of business and society and in fostering dialogue among business schools about how best to prepare the next generation of business leaders.

The paper is available at http://www.aspencbe.org/documents/TowardBetterFinancialMarketRegulationInDepth.pdf.

Roundtable Participants

William Allen, Jack H. Nusbaum Professor of Law and Business; Director, Pollack Center for Law and Business, Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University
Amar Bhidé, Lawrence D. Glaubinger Professor of Business, Columbia Business School
John Biggs, Executive-in-Residence, Leonard N. Stern School of Business
Bruce Buchanan, C.W. Nichols Professor of Business Ethics; Director, Markets, Ethics and Law Program, Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University
Leonardo Burlamaqui, Program Officer, The Ford Foundation
John Coffee, Adolf A. Berle Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
Thomas Cooley, Richard R. West Dean; Paganelli-Bull Professor of Economics, Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University
William H. Donaldson, Chairman & CEO, Donaldson Enterprises Inc.; former Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission
Charles Elson, Edgar S. Woolard Chair in Corporate Governance; Director, John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance, Lerner College of Business and Economics,University of Delaware
J. Michael Farren, Retired Corporate Secretary and General Counsel, Xerox Corporation; former White House Deputy Counsel
Daniel Feldman, Special Counsel for Law and Policy, Office of the New York State Comptroller
Felice Friedman, Director, Global Public Policy, Ernst & Young LLP
Rich Leimsider, Director, The Aspen Institute Center for Business Education
Sylvia Maxfield, Associate Professor of Management, Simmons College School of Management
Krishen Mehta, Advisor, The Aspen Institute Business and Society Program
George Muñoz, Principle, Muñoz Investment Banking
Steven Schwarcz, Stanley A. Star Professor of Law and Business, Duke University School of Law
Don Vangel, Partner; Director, Bank Regulatory Services, Ernst & Young LLP
David Walker, President and CEO, Peter G. Peterson Foundation
Lawrence White, Arthur E. Imperatore Professor of Economics; Deputy Department Chair, Economics, Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University
Provided by CSRwire.com

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First of all weldone to all team members to make that report for everyone. You guys gave your best and best result and time everything is clears in the report every srea you picked from business world hats off team. Well if you do not mind can i ask a quick question? do you guys have any idea about angel investors? I was looking this site http://www.theideasfactory.com they look good but still confused.

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