Monday, October 13, 2008

Here We Go On Regulation

Here's why we need some minimal but effective regulations to avoid crises such as the current one:

“We now have a collective anger, disgust, over our whole financial system and it’s obvious we’re going to get a regulatory backlash,” said Robert E. Litan, an economist at the Brookings Institution who has studied financial and regulatory issues for decades. “And we know it’s going to come in a big way in 2009.”

Mr. Litan predicts a spillover effect to other industries because voters have the perception that “big companies are animals and they need to be put in their cages.”

He added: “The only open question going forward in this new era is, are we going to overdo it? Is the pendulum going to go completely over in the other direction?”

That's been my fear all along, as I've expressed many times.

Please read the article by Jackie Calmes in the NY Times. She lists a number of possible regulatory expansions.

Credit Default Swaps

Emission Curbs

Energy Limits

Health Care Mandates

Safeguards For Food, Etc.

Rules For Capital And Liquidity

Derivatives

Hedge Funds

Mortgage Brokers

Credit Rating Agencies

Executive's Compensation

Corporate Boards

Predatory Lending

Credit Card Marketing, Etc.

Insurance Agencies

Some of this will obviously make sense, but the fear of overshooting is real.

No comments: