Information about Deregulation
Deregulation is the process by which governments removed selected regulations on business in order to encourage the theorical efficient operation of markets. Deregulation is different from liberalization, because a liberalized market, allowing plural or infinital players, can be regulated, to protect specially the end consumer rights, specially to prevent de facto or law-allowed oligopolies. United States Deregulation was a major trend in the United States in the last quarter of the twentieth century. A number of major deregulation initiatives were passed. Some of these were withdrawn quickly (but not quickly enough to avoid major problems), including the deregulation of savings and loans. American savings banks, which were permitted to lend unfettered, had their depositors funds insured by the federal government, creating a moral hazard. Others have been considered more widely successful, including deregulation of transportation, the gas market, and the electricity market. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the media market was significantly deregulated. Related Legislation * 1976 - Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements PL 94-435 * 1978 - Airline Deregulation Act PL 95-504 * 1978 - National Gas Policy Act PL 95-621 * 1980 - Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act PL 96-221 * 1980 - Motor Carrier Act PL 96-296 * 1980 - Staggers Rail Act PL 96-448 * 1982 - Bus Regulatory Reform Act PL 97-261 * 1989 - Natural Gas Wellhead Decontrol Act PL 101-60 * 1992 - National Energy Policy Act PL 102-486 * 1996 - Telecommunications Act PL 104-104 * 1999 - Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act PL 106-102 Japan Since the economic buble in 1990s collapsed, the Japanese government has seen deregulation as effective way to life its economy because it has a huge deficit and cannot conduct a large tax-cut.
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