Dodd-Frank Regulators, Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Agency Capture

Paul Rose, Christopher J. Walker
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank) has raised the stakes for financial regulation by requiring more than twenty federal agencies to promulgate nearly 400 new rules. Scholars, regulated entities, Congress, courts, and the agencies themselves have all recognized — even before Dodd-Frank — the lack of rigorous cost-benefit analysis in the context of financial rulemaking. The D.C. Circuit has struck down several financial regulations because of inadequate cost-benefit analysis, with three more challenges to be decided this summer. Members of Congress have introduced legislation to address this problem, including a call for the President to intervene to require more exacting economic analysis. Regulated entities and investor protection groups are vigorously debating whether (and how) financial regulators should engage in cost-benefit analysis, as are a variety of policymakers, academics, and commentators. Absent from these debates, however, is a serious discussion of the importance of cost-benefit analysis in promoting good governance and democratic accountability. This Essay seeks to fill that void. The lack of attention to accountability is particularly troubling in the Dodd-Frank context, where most regulators are independent agencies and thus less democratically accountable via presidential oversight. In particular, independent agencies are not required to submit proposed rules and accompanying economic analyses for presidential review. Nor are their high-ranking officials subject to plenary presidential removal authority. Without another means of accountability — e.g., a robust cost-benefit analysis embedded in notice-and-comment rulemaking — independent agencies are more vulnerable to agency capture. This Essay argues that Dodd-Frank regulators should consider more seriously the democratic accountability concerns at play when regulating the financial markets. And those who regulate the regulators (via statutory command, executive order, or judicial review) should pay more attention to the good governance rationales for cost-benefit analysis when deciding whether and how to encourage Dodd-Frank regulators to engage in more rigorous and transparent economic analysis.
多德-弗兰克法案的监管者、成本效益分析和机构捕获
《多德-弗兰克华尔街改革和消费者保护法案》(多德-弗兰克法案)要求20多个联邦机构颁布近400项新规定,提高了金融监管的风险。学者、受监管实体、国会、法院和机构本身都认识到——甚至在多德-弗兰克法案出台之前——在金融规则制定的背景下缺乏严格的成本效益分析。由于成本效益分析不足,华盛顿特区巡回法院已经否决了几项金融法规,今年夏天还有三项挑战有待裁决。国会议员已经提出了解决这个问题的立法,包括呼吁总统进行干预,要求进行更严格的经济分析。受监管实体和投资者保护团体正在激烈辩论金融监管机构是否(以及如何)参与成本效益分析,各种政策制定者、学者和评论员也是如此。然而,在这些辩论中没有认真讨论成本效益分析在促进善政和民主问责制方面的重要性。本文试图填补这一空白。在《多德-弗兰克法案》(Dodd-Frank)的背景下,缺乏对问责制的关注尤其令人不安,因为大多数监管机构都是独立机构,因此不太可能通过总统监督实现民主问责。特别是,独立机构不需要向总统提交拟议的规则和附带的经济分析。他们的高级官员也不受总统的全权罢免。如果没有另一种问责手段——例如,在通知和评论规则制定中嵌入强有力的成本效益分析——独立机构更容易受到机构俘获的影响。本文认为,多德-弗兰克法案的监管者在监管金融市场时,应该更认真地考虑民主问责问题。而那些监管监管机构的人(通过法定命令、行政命令或司法审查)在决定是否以及如何鼓励多德-弗兰克法案监管机构进行更严格和透明的经济分析时,应该更多地关注成本效益分析的良好治理基础。
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