Regulatory Cycles: A Political Economy Model

Pooya Almasi, Jihad Dagher, Carlo G. Prato
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Financial regulatory policy in the U.S. has been conspicuously pro-cyclical over the last two decades. The 2000s financial boom coincided with a period of financial deregulation and the post-crisis response, a massive scaling up of regulation, was largely implemented during an economic downturn. Many argued that these regulatory waves were excessive. More recently, there are strong signs of a move toward deregulation, at a time of a booming economy and stock market. A closer look at historical financial boom-bust cycles suggests that, in fact, pro-cyclicality in financial regulation is a common and recurring pattern. This paper combines a signaling model of elections with a simple financial regulation model to study how public opinion, financial innovation, and policy-makers incentives shape financial regulation. While changes in voters' perceptions of financial innovation alone can generate a pro-cyclical pattern, we show that this cyclicality can be significantly amplified by politicians' electoral incentives: Both over-regulation and under-regulation can naturally arise in equilibrium, and small changes in public opinion can induce large regulatory shifts.
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监管周期:一个政治经济学模型
在过去20年里,美国的金融监管政策明显是顺周期的。本世纪头十年的金融繁荣,恰逢金融放松管制的时期,而危机后的应对措施——大规模扩大监管——主要是在经济低迷时期实施的。许多人认为,这些监管浪潮过度了。最近,在经济和股市蓬勃发展之际,有强烈的迹象表明政府将放松监管。仔细研究历史上的金融盛衰周期就会发现,事实上,金融监管的顺周期性是一种常见且反复出现的模式。本文将选举信号模型与简单的金融监管模型相结合,研究公众舆论、金融创新和决策者激励如何影响金融监管。虽然选民对金融创新的看法的变化本身就可以产生顺周期模式,但我们表明,这种周期性可以被政治家的选举激励显著放大:过度监管和监管不足都可以自然地在均衡中出现,公众舆论的微小变化可以引发大规模的监管转变。
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