Patrick A McLaughlin, Oliver Sherouse, Mark Febrizio, M Scott King
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The passage of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in 2010 continued a trend toward lengthier and more complex acts of Congress. In this article, we use novel metrics of the size, scope, and complexity of acts of Congress to assess Dodd-Frank’s place in this trend. Our analysis is consistent with the hypothesis that, in terms of its regulatory effects, Dodd-Frank is the biggest act of Congress in recent history and may become the biggest ever. We argue that this trend toward longer and more complex laws can cause deterioration in the quality of the regulations the laws authorize for two procedural reasons. First, a large act can create a regulatory surge that overwhelms the quality control process. Second, because a large act can precipitate the creation of many regulations by different agencies that target the same industry, the agencies create rules in relative ignorance of their potential interactions.
2010年通过的《多德-弗兰克华尔街改革与消费者保护法案》(Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act)延续了国会通过更长、更复杂法案的趋势。在本文中,我们使用国会法案的规模、范围和复杂性的新指标来评估多德-弗兰克法案在这一趋势中的地位。我们的分析与这样一个假设是一致的,即就其监管效果而言,多德-弗兰克法案是近期历史上最大的国会法案,并可能成为有史以来最大的法案。我们认为,由于两个程序上的原因,这种趋向于更长和更复杂的法律的趋势可能导致法律授权的法规质量的恶化。首先,一个大的行为可能会造成监管激增,使质量控制过程不堪重负。其次,由于一项重大行为可能促使针对同一行业的不同机构制定许多法规,这些机构在制定规则时相对忽视了它们之间潜在的相互作用。