We really need to know:
- Kind of building. Residential tower, office etc?
- High, moderate, or low seismic?
- What region?
Where I practice, moment frames are pretty much dead for the low-rise buildings for which they are generally suitable. These buildings go shear wall and, usually, the question is not when to start using shear walls but, rather, when to stop. In non-seismic country, easy bake shear walls should get you up to 30 stories or so. Beyond that you start to get into fancier systems with very thick walls, energy dissipating devices, diagrids, hybrid wall-frame, outriggers etc. For serious high rise, my understanding is that we've settled on core + mast setups as being generally the most economical. That, in a segment of construction where the economics is very regional and technology changes fast.
I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.