Cui Bono From Financial Regulation?
In 125 BC, Roman politician and prosecutor Lucius Cassius introduced the legal principle of?cui bono, which roughly translates to "who benefits?" It intends to cut through distractions and irrelevant details of a case to focus on motive – especially financial motive.
In modern day, critics of the current financial regulatory agenda have focused on what they consider its flaws:
Not to mention the potentially deleterious effect regulatory overreach could have on economic growth.
But American Securities Association CEO Chris Iacovella, who has successfully sued the SEC, offers a novel perspective:?Cui bono?from today's financial regulation?
"What's going on is that the Administrative State is supporting the agenda of derivative players?– accountants, consultants, lawyers?– who are advocating for more and more regulation," Iacovella told me in a recent interview. "This has created a self-perpetuating cycle."
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"This doesn't just apply to financial services?– it applies across all sectors of the economy," Iacovella said. "But in finance, one thing is clear: The implementation of an unprecedented regulatory agenda will result in a significant transfer of wealth from regulated market participants?– including retail investors and small businesses who use their own capital to take risks?– to a professional class who does not."
Ironically, the world view behind regulatory activism is often that financial services intermediaries are extracting too much economic rent from the economy: Their share of GDP is too high, activists claim, and needs to be squeezed down by increasing transparency and competition.
Iacovella suggests that exactly the opposite is happening. "Regulators are imposing enormous costs on financial institutions that are ultimately a tax on the investor base," Iacovella told me.?
As one example, the Consolidated Audit Trail?– the subject of ASA's current litigation against the SEC?– has racked up $540 million in start-up costs, with another $240 million slated to be spent this year. 80% of those costs will be passed on to financial services firms. "Those incremental costs disproportionately affect smaller firms," Iacovella told me. "They are putting pressure on independent players to look at acquisitions, which ultimately will reduce competition, not increase it."
"We're looking at a transfer of wealth from risk takers, entrepreneurs and businesspeople operating in the real world?– from investors putting their savings on the risk/reward line in financial markets?– to a progressive, pro-regulation administrative state. The net result is a drag on economic activity."
Whether you agree with Iacovella or not, there is no denying that the modern world leans toward regulation and bureaucracy. It may well be born from good intentions?– human beings' innate belief that they can exercise significant control over what can go wrong with their environment. Some attempt at control is prudent. But after a certain point, the unintended negative consequences of a bloated administrative and bureaucratic state?– and the much-larger-than-needed professional class that surrounds and undergirds it?– outweigh the benefits.?
In finance, we may have already reached that point.?
CEO at 3ethos and Director at the Center for Board Certified Fiduciaries (CBCF)
11 个月John - you provide the perfect explanation for why I hate the DOL's new retirement rule. The only people who are benefiting from this mental masturbation are the ERISA attorneys. If we took 1% of the hundreds of millions of dollars that are going to be spent on legal opinions interpreting this worthless rule and redirected the funds to appropriate training, we would produce far more positive outcomes for retirement plan participants.