Who watches the watchmen?

AuthorGearino, G.D.
PositionFINEPRINT

Elsewhere in this issue you'll find an article I wrote about Ken Lewis, the beleaguered (and now former) chief executive officer of Bank of America Corp. In the course of researching that piece, I realized that while there is near unanimity about the need for reform of securities regulation--after all, no one is so foolish as to make the case that things were fine just as they were--there is much debate over the shape, and severity, of the overhaul. In one regard, managing the securities business ought to be a straightforward proposition, something akin to supervising a swimming competition: Your primary job is to make sure everyone stays in their lanes, no one leaps in before the starting gun sounds, the timing device is operating properly, etc. Beyond that, you simply get out of the way and let the swimmers swim. But the reality is that the financial marketplace is like a swim meet in which the competitors assume everything and anything is OK until you tell them it's not. They're buying and selling lane-swap agreements with one another while you're flipping through the rule book before the race in the faint hope of finding some prohibition against it.

That's why all the discussions about reform tend to focus on such nut-and-bolt issues as reporting requirements, compensation limits and supervision of exotic investment instruments. The one thing not being debated is the moral underpinning of financial regulation--or more specifically, the utter lack of moral authority among the people who now seek to rein in the excesses of the industry.

I'm talking about Congress, where 535 elected officials operate an unregulated, trillion-dollar market for the trading of influence and favor. The world has never seen anything like it in terms of scale and riches. Congress is where votes are commodities to be bartered; where stockholder money (otherwise known as "taxes") is used for political reward; where continuance in office is always the first consideration; and where the only independent effort at outside regulation--the ballot box--long ago proved to be no impediment at all to the marketplace of favor swapping and influence trading.

This may sound like raw cynicism, but the sad and simple fact is that Congress wishes to impose standards of conduct upon the financial world that it doesn't want imposed upon itself. Congress demands fiscal discipline from the private sector at the very moment the national debt is climbing into calculator-shorting...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT