THE GOLEMBE LIBRARY
These are the titles of past issues of The Golembe
Reports by year starting with 1995, through 2002. The introductions
for reports beginning with Vol. 1999-1 through the final issue, Vol. 2002-4 are
linked to the report titles. Report titles from 1995-1 through 1998-10
have been annotated where needed to identify the contents of the report.
In the future, additional "Introductions" or title annotations will be furnished
for reports from 1985 to 1994, and for 1967 to 1984. Please check back
often.
2002
2002 -1&2
Can the Dual Banking System Be Saved?
2002-3
A Fresh Look at a Few Old Problems
2002-4
Reflections
2001
2001-1
Tea Leaves and Credit Crunches
2001-2 The
FDIC In The 1950s: A Retrospective Look And Some Current Implications
2001-3
Scorecard on Regulatory Structure Reform: I
2001-4
Scorecard on Regulatory Structure Reform: Part II
2001-5&6
Reforming Bank Capital Regulation: The Great Leap Forward
2001-7 Americans
Treasure Privacy.Com (Carl Felesnfeld)
2001-8
The Not So Torpid Days of Summer
2001-9
The Safety Net: Myths, Perceptions, and History
2001-10
To everything there is a season . . .
2000
2000-1 Thoughts
on the Economy for the Year 2000 (John M. Godfrey)
2000-2&3 Reform of the Financial Regulatory
Structure
2000 - 4 The Myths of Gramm-Leach-Bliley
(Philip C. Myer )
2000 - 5
Perception
is Nine-Tenths of the Law
2000 - 6
Banking
Public Policy And The New Technologies
2000 - 7
Bank Regulation: A Summer Potpourri
2000 - 8
Reflections on Deposit Insurance Reform: What
It May Mean, and Why
2000 - 9
Readers Turn
2000-10
A Few Random Thoughts At Year End
1999
1999-1
1998: A Year Without "Closure"
1999-2
The Long Road to Financial Modernization Legislation: Will the Trip be
Worth It?
1999-3
Other Voices, Other Views
1999-4
The Hottest Words in Town
1999-5
The U.S. Financial Regulatory Structure -- Out of Step with the Rest of the
World?
1999-6
Half-time Report
1999-7
Some Thoughts on the Current Boom and Its Banking Implications
1999-8
The "New Economy," Agency Structure, and Financial Modernization (Frip Chissom)
1999-9
Financial Modernization Legislation: The End of the Beginning
1998
1998-1
1997: Random Thoughts and Missed Opportunities
1998-2
Mission Creep? (David Holland)
1998-3
Reforming Bank Capital Regulation: Some First Impressions
1998-4
The Emergence of Political Union in Europe?
1998-5
What Do All Those Mergers Mean? - II
1998-6
Central Banking and the English Experiment
1998-7
The 1998 ABA Convention: Nearing the End of the Road?
1998-8
Origins of Financial Modernization (Philip C. Meyer)
1998-9&10 The Bailout of Long-Term Capital
Management: A Few Crucial Questions
1997
1997-1
History Does Count -- But Which History?
1997-2 Let's
Hear It for "Sovereign Credit"(Unpublished)
1997-2
The Battle for Bank Regulatory Supremacy
1997-3
The Public Purpose of Banking (Mark Olson)
1997-4
While I Was Away
1997-5
Strange Doings in Threadneedle Street
1997-6 A
Summer Potpourri: Random Thoughts On The Current Banking Scene
1997-7
Time to Abolish Reserve Requirements (Bert Ely)
1997-8
Catching Up
1997-9
The Battle for Financial Modernization (I): A View From the Trenches
1997-10
The Battle for Financial Modernization (II): A View From Afar
1996
1996-1
Reflecting on 1995
1996-2
Alan S. Blinder -- And Corporate Governance
1996-3 A
Touch of March Madness
1996-4
Europe's Drive for Monetary Union -- and Beyond
1996-5
"Leach Bags Reg Relief for Modest Reform Bill"
1996-6
What Do All Those Mergers Mean?
1996-7
The Hunt Commission Had It Right
1996-8
ABA Convention Notes
1996-9
The Comptroller's New Operating Subsidiary Regulations
1995
1995-1
Reflecting on 1994
1995-2
Troublesome Myths of Banking: I
1995-3/4 Troublesome Myths of
Banking: II
1995-5
Odds and Ends
1995-6
The Single Banking Market: European and U.S. Approaches
1995-7
New Battles and Old Battlefields
1995-8
Deposit Insurance: Is Privatization an Option?
1995-9
Deposit Insurance -- Some Unfinished Business