On to more specific thoughts. The Federal Reserve is very unhappy with the prospect of losing its regulatory authority over all but the largest financial institutions. ... I found this all to be exasperating. None of the attending presidents adequately explained how a Fed that completely failed to prevent dangerous consolidation before the crisis should now be viewed as a credible enemy of too-big-to-fail after the crisis. None of the attending presidents provided tangible evidence of internal changes designed to make the Fed a more credible regulator. Each was asked about the odd disconnect between the Fed's pre-crisis actions and its post-crisis rhetoric, and each responded by saying little more than "we've learned our lesson, now trust us".... If it believes it can regulate most effectively, [the Fed] should be explicit about how it might do that. ... If the incentives were in place to turn a blind eye before, and little has changed, then "we've learned our lesson" will not make for a sustainable model of competent regulation.
“Passion and prejudice govern the world; only under the name of reason” --John Wesley
Monday, April 19, 2010
Go read Ryan Avent over at the Economist magazine on financial reform...
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