Why Don’t We Get the “Right” Regulations?

by Will Wilkinson on October 12, 2008

I’m with Pete Boettke:

The post Keynesians in my mind often pay lip service to the epistemic issues that Hayek raised, but not really. And they are often completely innocent of the public choice incentive issues in public policy, though they often rail against the political process under monopoly capitalism.  Here is the problem — we should demand behavioral symmetry between politics and economics.  The same epistemic and incentive assumptions we make for actors in the market should be the same we make for those in politics.  If political actors are omniscient, then economic actors should be omniscient; if market actors are plagued by uncertainty, then political actors should also be seen to be ensnared in uncertainty.  If political actors are viewed as paid off by rich businessmen under monopoly capitalism, then political actors should also be viewed as up for sale under social democracy; if political actors are instead self-less saint like characters in social democracy, then they should be viewed that way under monopoly capitalism.  Behavioral symmetry doesn’t mean outcome similarity.  Outcomes are a function of differences in the institutional structures.

[...]

The current financial fiasco is not a consequence of market instability, but because of the inability of government to engage in “apt intervention” due to knowledge and incentive issues, and that in reality it is nowhere as dangerous as in the hands of politicians who presume they have that knowledge to effectively tackle the problem that they in fact do not. Since they don’t have the knowledge required but must act as if they do, they will instead respond to political incentives of the election cycle and their ideological whim.  When you breakdown the “institutional structures” of an economy to engage in “apt intervention” when you cannot “aptly” accomplish what you plan to do, then don’t be surprised when things go crazy.

This isn’t libertarian, this is economics. 

The crisis was certainly caused in part by Wall Street-driven regulatory capture. The not-really-ideological point I seem to have a hard time getting across is that the root cause of an instance of capture is the set of prior institutional incentives that made capture possible and even likely. Our current period of newfound clarity about the need for reform does not put us in a position to finally and fundamentally fix the system. It just puts us in a different position — a position in which the incentives of the regulators have undergone a sudden and dramatic shock. Those with the power to influence the reform of regulation will now influence it in a different way — one that is not inconsistent with the regulators’ changed sense of mission. The chance that the outcome of this the process will be optimal approaches zero. And the chance that it sets in place a new set of unstable incentives that will take a decade or two to unwind approaches certainty. When the new regulatory settlement unravels, we’ll hear precisely the same things: that we didn’t have the right regulations in place because some opportunistic interests captured some part of the regulatory process. But if we know that’s going to happen in advance, shouldn’t we accept the limits on the possibility of effective long-term regulation and look for feasible alternatives to such thoroughly politicized financial markets?

  • Tortured Analogy Productions presents:

    MORE REGULATION
    A Tragedy in One Act

    Featuring:
    Dr. Weird as "The Government"
    Steve as "The Financial Markets"
    and Corn as "Regulation"

    <object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/DUWuUIiciWk&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/DUWuUIiciWk&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>

    Please replace "hungry" with "hosed".

    The Acclaimed Prequel
  • Argh. I was afraid of that. The effect is ruined, but here's the plain URL for the video I tried to embed: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUWuUIiciWk
  • catchy
    You've made this pt. several x, but I don't know whether your analysis applies just to the US or what.

    Your pessimism re: regulation seems to rely on general premises re infuence on gov. etc.

    But there are places w. effective regulation. e.g. Canada maintained robust capital reserve requirements and their banks haven't melted down in anything like US fashion.

    I'd like to know whether your claim is perfectly general. And if so, how do you account for e.g. Canada?

    From my POV you seem to be participating in the general 'government is never the solution' culture that kept us from having the type of sensible oversight that was in place right above the border.

    p.s. sorry bout your run-in w. Leiter. I study a phil. + think it's nice to have folk trying to bring philosophy to a wider audience...
  • Dain gives some evidence we shouldn't equate profit-sector and government agents that way here:
    http://dryhyphenolympics.blogspot.com/2008/05/p...
  • I think this is mostly right, but it would help if you said some more about the level of generality at which the limits to effective regulation apply. If applied at the highest level of generality that would make any reform impossible under any circumstances. Surely it is at least conceivable that some reforms other than complete financial deregulation might make the financial system better. The question is what those might be.
  • Tushar
    Exactlyyy the point I was trying to get thru in the Financial Dirigisme Thread. its just so hard, I agree. Thank you
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