Showing posts with label lack of regulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lack of regulation. Show all posts

Thursday, September 10, 2009

The Myths of Deregulation and Lack of Regulation As Causal Factors To The Financial Crisis

Professor Arnold Kling, former economist on the staff of the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System and also a former senior economist at Freddie Mac and presently a co-host of the popular EconoLog has an eloquent and impressive article refuting the popular myths peddled by liberal-progressives at the American.com, entitled Regulation and the Financial Crisis: Myths and Realities

His intro: (italics mine)

``The role of regulatory policy in the financial crisis is sometimes presented in simplistic and misleading ways. This essay will address the following myths and misconceptions

Myth 1: Banking regulators were in the dark as new financial instruments reshaped the financial industry.

Myth 2: Deregulation allowed the market to adopt risky practices, such as using agency ratings of mortgage securities.

Myth 3: Policy makers relied too much on market discipline to regulate financial risk taking

Myth 4: The financial crisis was primarily a short-term panic.

Myth 5: The only way to prevent this crisis would have been to have more vigorous regulation.

``The rest of this essay spells out these misconceptions. In each case, there is a contrast between the myth and reality."

In short, such misplaced arguments attempt to deflect on the culpability of the role of policymakers and their interventionists policies in shaping the financial crisis and instead pin the blame on "market failure" as justification for more government intervention.

Read the rest here

Professor Kling's conclusion:

``The biggest myth is that regulation is a one-dimensional problem, in which the choice is either “more” or “less.” From this myth, the only reasonable inference following the financial crisis is that we need to move the dial from “less” to “more.”

``The reality is that financial regulation is a complex problem. Indeed, many regulatory policies were major contributors to the crisis. To proceed ahead without examining or questioning past policies, particularly in the areas of housing and bank capital regulation, would preclude learning the lessons of history."

Yes, oversimplification of highly complex problems can lead to more prospective troubles than function as preventive or cure to the disease, especially when myopic prescriptions ignore the human behavior dynamics in the face of regulatory circumstances.

As David Altig, senior vice president and research director at the Atlanta Fed wrote in Markets work, even when they don’t, ``Markets are, everywhere and always, one step (or more) ahead of regulators"

Monday, July 13, 2009

Has Lack Of Regulation Caused This Crisis? Evidence Says No

We find it odd when experts argue of the lack of regulation as the cause of this crisis.

Evidence simply don't support such claims...

Chart From Casey Research

According to Casey Research, ``The Federal Register is a daily publication of all the proposed and final rules and regulations of the U.S. government. The size of the register is often used to gauge the scope of regulation, and it’s been on steroids for decades.

``According to the Washington, DC-based Competitive Enterprise Institute’s 2009 edition of “Ten Thousand Commandments” by Clyde Crews, the cost of abiding federal regulations is estimated at $1.172 trillion in 2008 – 8% of the year’s GDP. This “regulation without representation,” says Crews, enables the funding of new federal initiatives through the compliance costs of expanded regulations, rather than hiking taxes or expanding the deficit."

Imagine, compliance costs at an estimated 8% of the GDP and growing!!! This represents as tremendous burden, since it reduces the productive capacity of the US economy. Money that would have gone into capital investments have been lost due to sheer compliance on the massive regulatory structure.

To add, the Federal Tax Code (see below) which is also incorporated in the Federal Register has also seen a ballooning of pages-67,506.

The tax code had only 400 pages in its inception in 1913!

More from George Reisman [The Myth That Laissez Faire Is Responsible For Our Crisis] (bold highlights mine)
  1. Government spending in the United States currently equals more than forty percent of national income, i.e., the sum of all wages and salaries and profits and interest earned in the country. This is without counting any of the massive off-budget spending such as that on account of the government enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Nor does it count any of the recent spending on assorted "bailouts." What this means is that substantially more than forty dollars of every one hundred dollars of output are appropriated by the government against the will of the individual citizens who produce that output. The money and the goods involved are turned over to the government only because the individual citizens wish to stay out of jail. Their freedom to dispose of their own incomes and output is thus violated on a colossal scale. In contrast, under laissez-faire capitalism, government spending would be on such a modest scale that a mere revenue tariff might be sufficient to support it. The corporate and individual income taxes, inheritance and capital gains taxes, and social security and Medicare taxes would not exist.

  2. There are presently fifteen federal cabinet departments, nine of which exist for the very purpose of respectively interfering with housing, transportation, healthcare, education, energy, mining, agriculture, labor, and commerce, and virtually all of which nowadays routinely ride roughshod over one or more important aspects of the economic freedom of the individual. Under laissez-faire capitalism, eleven of the fifteen cabinet departments would cease to exist and only the departments of justice, defense, state, and treasury would remain. Within those departments, moreover, further reductions would be made, such as the abolition of the IRS in the Treasury Department and the Antitrust Division in the Department of Justice.

  3. The economic interference of today's cabinet departments is reinforced and amplified by more than one hundred federal agencies and commissions, the most well known of which include, besides the IRS, the FRB and FDIC, the FBI and CIA, the EPA, FDA, SEC, CFTC, NLRB, FTC, FCC, FERC, FEMA, FAA, CAA, INS, OHSA, CPSC, NHTSA, EEOC, BATF, DEA, NIH, and NASA. Under laissez-faire capitalism, all such agencies and commissions would be done away with, with the exception of the FBI, which would be reduced to the legitimate functions of counterespionage and combating crimes against person or property that take place across state lines.

  4. To complete this catalog of government interference and its trampling of any vestige of laissez faire, as of the end of 2007, the last full year for which data are available, the Federal Register contained fully seventy-three thousand pages of detailed government regulations. This is an increase of more than ten thousand pages since 1978, the very years during which our system, according to one of The New York Times articles quoted above, has been "tilted in favor of business deregulation and against new rules." Under laissez-faire capitalism, there would be no Federal Register. The activities of the remaining government departments and their subdivisions would be controlled exclusively by duly enacted legislation, not the rule-making of unelected government officials.

  5. And, of course, to all of this must be added the further massive apparatus of laws, departments, agencies, and regulations at the state and local level. Under laissez-faire capitalism, these too for the most part would be completely abolished and what remained would reflect the same kind of radical reductions in the size and scope of government activity as those carried out on the federal level.

It's incredible to discover how the gullible public falls for such deceptions.