Wealth, Power and Insider Trading on Wall Street
In today's increasingly internationalized worldwide economic system, defined by the expansion of multinational corporate conglomerates into foreign shores, the necessity for effective and efficient financial regulation to prevent criminal conduct covered by the catchall term "insider trading" has never been greater. Whereas autonomous countries once maintained clear authority over businesses which were built on their shores, through levying taxes, enforcing fiscal regulations, and instituting a lawful system of commerce, today the most successful companies are those with the wherewithal to transfer their operations abroad. Global financial management requires a comprehensive comprehension of foreign exchange and currency markets, derivatives securities, international financial debt and equity markets, international portfolio investments and the global market for real assets. Due to the fact that "financial markets and intermediaries today are globally linked through a vast international telecommunications network," with this continual process resulting in "the trading of securities and the transfer of payments go on virtually around the clock," (Merton and Bodie, 1995), the field of global financial management has emerged to meet the needs of major multinational corporations. According to the United States Securities and Exchange Corporation (SEC), "illegal insider trading refers generally to buying or selling a security, in breach of a fiduciary duty or other relationship of trust and confidence, while in possession of material, nonpublic information about the security" (2001), although this term has come to describe a whole host of unethical activities in which information not accessible to the general public is used to take advantage of market conditions in the pursuit of profit.
One of the primary mandates of public policy makers within a democratic society is the conception and implementation of laws designed to prevent the undue consolidation of power by those who would use said authority to manipulate the system. Throughout American history laws have been enacted to regulate the growth of monopolistic corporations, to prevent corrupt party machines from dominating the political process, and to erode the growing power of paid lobbyists to influence Congressional action. The corrosive quality of unchecked power has always been anathema to the American ideal of equal opportunity, and the same instinctual...
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