Shirts</a> the wrong incentives, because there are too fPolo Ralph Laurenew competing firms (ie, a monopoly), or no market price (ie, pollution)
EVEN the fiercest free-market advocates would concede that governments can justly intervene to curtail businesses that become too powerful. Most would allow that dominant firms with the clout to gouge their customers should be broken up or subjected to strict price regulations. Similarly a judicious regulator should penaliselebron viii
The case for more regulation of banks’ liquiditFrom The Economist printkobe viedition Oct 4th 2007
When to bail outEconomics focusCopyright ? 2007 The Economist Newspaper and The Ec[url=“http://www.juicycoutureoutletusa.com/”]juicy couture
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As for the risk of a “dash for cash”, Chris Keeling, a business-continuity specialist, reckons that there may be an initial spurt of withdrawals but that it will not last long. There will not be much to spend money on[url=“http://www.juicycoutureoutletusa.com/juicy-couture-diaper-
handbags-c-20.html”]Juicy Couture Diaper Bag[/url] and no one will want to stand in queues. If fears of initial panic may be overdone, the FSA exercise also suggested that the after-effects of the pandemic would be more testing than anticipated. Markets will recover much more quickly than bereaved employees.
Retail institutions came under greater strain than wholesale ones because their work is less automated, they have more customer contact and their employees are more likely to be affected by school closures. Since the exercise, British retaiReebok Shoesl banks have been thrashing



