在黑暗中调节

R. Romano
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引用次数: 23

摘要

基础金融立法通常是在金融危机发生期间或之后通过的,因为对危机的原因还没有充分的了解。此外,金融机构在一个充满不确定性的动态环境中运作,因此,即使在最好的情况下颁布的立法也可能产生意想不到的反常后果,并且随着经济和技术环境的变化,对一组初始条件正确的监管要求可能变得不合适。此外,美国政治制度现状的粘性使得修改立法变得困难,即使可能有这样做的共识。本文认为,应对这种令人沮丧的事态的最佳手段是,理所当然地,在危机驱动的金融立法及其实施监管中,包括两个关键的程序机制:(1)要求在未来某个时间点对立法和监管决定进行自动后续审查和重新考虑;(2)在可行的情况下鼓励小规模试验和灵活执行的监管豁免或豁免权力。这两种程序性手段都将更好地为监管机构提供信息和校准,从而至少在一定程度上减轻因危机而产生的金融立法和规则制定过程中不可避免地出现的意外错误。鉴于金融机构和市场对经济增长和社会福祉的核心作用,立法者在金融危机中采取行动,不让事态变得更糟,这一点极其重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Regulating in the Dark
Foundational financial legislation is typically adopted in the midst or aftermath of financial crises, when an informed understanding of the causes of the crisis is not yet available. Moreover, financial institutions operate in a dynamic environment of considerable uncertainty, such that legislation enacted even under the best of circumstances can have perverse unintended consequences, and regulatory requirements correct for an initial set of conditions can become inappropriate as economic and technological circumstances change. Furthermore, the stickiness of the status quo in the U.S. political system renders it difficult to revise legislation, even though there may be a consensus to do so. This essay contends that the best means of responding to this dismal state of affairs is to include, as a matter of course, in crisis-driven financial legislation and its implementing regulation, two key procedural mechanisms: (1) a requirement of automatic subsequent review and reconsideration of the legislative and regulatory decisions at some future point in time; and (2) regulatory exemptive or waiver powers that encourage, where feasible, small scale experimentation, as well as flexibility in implementation. Both procedural devices will better inform and calibrate the regulatory apparatus, and could thereby mitigate, at least on the margin, the unintended errors which will invariably accompany financial legislation and rulemaking originating in a crisis. Given the centrality of financial institutions and markets to economic growth and societal well-being, it is exceedingly important for legislators acting in a financial crisis with the best of intentions, to not make matters worse.
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