About
Articles
Monographs
Working Papers
Reviews
Archive
Contact
 
 

The Dodd Bill and Crony Capitalism

Cliffford Asness and Aaron Brown on the rise of the Treasury-financial complex:

The Dodd bill is perfectly designed to create the largest and most powerful crony system in history. It’s not that the people, regulator or regulated, are personally corrupt. It’s that the system will itself select for, reward and enforce corruption.

No financial professional will be able to turn down a “request” for a campaign contribution, and all financial institutions will hire former staffers as advisers or directors. No regulator can afford to antagonize a potential future employer. Regulators themselves must kowtow to Congress, which can use them for under-the table subsidies to favored groups. None of this is new to politics, of course, but the scale and lack of defined powers are.

posted on 15 May 2010 by skirchner in Economics, Financial Markets, Rule of Law

(0) Comments | Permalink | Main

| More

Comments


Post a Comment

Commenting is not available in this channel entry.

Follow insteconomics on Twitter