Jump to Navigation
Home

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Markets Map
  • Sentiments
  • Topics
  • Data
  • Comments
  • Images
  • Blog
  • About

Secondary menu

  • Latest News
  • Top Rated
  • Most Popular
  • Archive
  • Discussions
  • South Africa Risks Downgrade; Rand Hits 4-Year Low
  • Apple avoided billions in taxes by using firms outside US
  • Aramco awards Midyan gas project to Larsen & Toubro
  • Kingfisher Airlines EVP Hitesh Patel puts in papers
  • Ex-executives may face off to buy MphasiS
  • Oil Market Manipulation Reaches Absurd Levels
  • SAUDI ARABIA: Dar Al Arkan Real Estate Development...
  • UAE: Gulf Capital to procure AED1.32 billion (US$359.29...
  • CNinsure's CEO Discusses Q1 2013 Results - Earnings...
  • Tornado survivor: I just want to cry

    Revolution and Reform

    Mon, 12/07/2009 - 11:05 EDT - Baseline Scenario - The Blog
    • Comments
    • External perspectives
    • regulatory reform

    Many of us bloggers are better at criticizing than at proposing anything — especially when the world makes it so easy to be a critic. The Epicurean Dealmaker, who has sent the occasional volley of criticism my way (I’m not linking to examples because my ego is too fragile), recently decided to deal with this head-on and wrote a “reformist manifesto,” complete with an epigraph from The Communist Manifesto, with a list of specific proposals.
    Basically these include cleaning up the regulatory structure, expanding the scope of regulation (consumer protection, hedge funds), moving “virtually all” OTC derivatives onto exchanges or clearinghouses (I believe that “virtually all” means the currently-proposed exemption for “end-user” hedges would be drastically reduced), and increasing Fed transparency. There is also this one: “Ban political campaign contributions by the financial industry.” I think that would be great, although there is at least one constitutional problem and possibly two there.
    There’s nothing on the list that I disagree with.
    However — and there’s always a however — I worry that it won’t be enough. TED consciously leaves the details to what he hopes will be “strong, competent, and well-informed regulators.” Several of his proposals, such as rationalizing Congressional oversight (to eliminate the current situation where the industry can arbitrage between the Senate Agriculture and Banking Committees), should help mitigate the problem of political interference and regulatory capture, but will it be enough? After all, George Stigler’s paper on regulatory capture wasn’t about the financial sector in particular — it was about all regulation, all the time.
    In a sense, this comes down to whether you place more faith in Congress or in regulatory agencies. I know defending Congress is a tough sell these days, but for example they did pass something called the Clean Air Act about forty years ago. And when, under the Bush administration, the EPA decided that greenhouse gas emissions didn’t fall under the Clean Air Act, the Supreme Court told the EPA it had to enforce the law. That said, there is also a famous 1984 case in which the Court said that in general regulatory agencies were free to interpret statutes how they choose, so this is not a black-and-white topic.
    As far as what I would do instead or in addition, I lean toward Simon and Peter’s earlier post, although Simon and I have had some discussion of the details since then.
    You’ll note that TED’s post is not on his personal site, but on The New Decembrists, a new site where he hopes to aggregate discussion regulatory reform in particular. (Bonus points for the historical reference, although that’s nothing new for TED.)
    By James Kwak

    • Original article
    • Login or register to post comments
     

    Related

    • How To Kill OTC Derivatives Reform in Two Sentences

      The post below, which looks like it could be extremely important, is by Mike Konczal, author of the popular (for those in the know) Rortybomb blog, a previous guest blogger on this site, and now a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute – James

    • Jeb Hensarling, George Orwell

      The debate over re-regulation of the financial sector has finally, and irreversibly, turned partisan.  This helps define issues in ways that may be more familiar and thus easier to understand.

    • Thirty Years of Financial Inefficiency

      Arjun Jayadev at Triple Crisis provides a quote from Thomas Phillipon that somehow never sees the light of day in the financial press: …the unit cost of intermediation is higher today than it was a century ago, and it has increased over the past 30 years. One interpretation is that improvements in information technology may have been cancelled out by increases in other financial activities whose social value is difficult to assess.

    • Financial Regulatory Reform?

    • Thinking About Financial Reform

      By Simon Johnson, co-author of 13 Bankers There are three contending narratives regarding the financial reform legislation that this week approaches its final hurdles in the US Senate.

    • Guest Contribution: Reforming Banking by Reforming Housing

      By Simon van Norden Today, we're fortunate to have Simon van Norden, Professor of Finance at HEC Montréal (École des Hautes Études Commerciales), continue as a guest contributor. In my previous post, I wrote about some of the evidence linking serious banking crises to real estate market collapses.

    • Congressional Procedure Reform Blogging

      US Capitol Building

    • Guest Post: Capturing the Regulatory Mothership

      This guest post was contributed by Ilya Podolyako, a third-year student (for a few more days) at the Yale Law School and until recently executive editor of the Yale Journal on Regulation and co-chair, with James Kwak, of the Progressive Law and Economics reading group.

    • Regulating compensation in the banking sector

      I see a good case for this, but also some big things to worry about. Today's Wall Street Journal reports: Policies that set the pay for tens of thousands of bank employees nationwide would require approval from the Federal Reserve as part of a far-reaching proposal to rein in risk-taking at financial institutions.

    • Do We Need the Agricultural Committees?

    Latest

    Why Your Facebook Account is More Secure Than Your Bank Account
    Why Your Facebook Account is More Secure Than...
    The Rise And Fall Of JP Morgan's Jamie Dimon, America's Most Powerful Banker
    The Rise And Fall Of JP Morgan's Jamie Dimon...

    User login

    • Create new account
    • Request new password
    • Click on the icon to sign in with your social network login or enter your Bullfax.com login

    Our Blog

    • Quantative Easing: Not on the long run
    • China’s Insurers, PC Shipments, Bird flu Consequences and French taxes in Our Daily Round-Up for 05/20/2013
    • Yahoo buys start-up Tumblr for $1bn

    Markets Map

    Markets Map

    Follow Us

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS
    S&P 500: 1666.29 -0.07% FTSE: 6755.63 1% Nikk.: 15364.44 0.02% DAX: 8455.83 0.68% HSI: 23374.949 -0.51% FX: EUR/GBP: 1.1832 USD/EUR: 1.2899 JPY/USD: 102.508 Commodities: Gold: 1397.90

    Bullfax.com - Market News & Analysis 2008-2011
    Contact Us | About Us | Terms & Conditions

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS .

    Secondary menu

    • Latest News
    • Top Rated
    • Most Popular
    • Archive
    • Discussions