监管仪式主义与全球内幕交易法的其他经验教训

John P. Anderson
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摘要

越来越多的人认为,作为世界上最古老的内幕交易制度,美国需要改革。事实上,目前国会有三个改革法案,其中一个最近在众议院以压倒性的两党支持获得通过。在美国考虑如何改革自己的内幕交易法之际,如果忽视从全球试验和创新中可能汲取的教训,那将是一种疏忽,尤其是考虑到最近世界各地采用了如此多的内幕交易制度。然而,任何这种比较研究在得出结论时都应谨慎。改革者应该密切关注政治、社会和经济动机,这或许可以解释最近全球几乎普遍采用内幕交易监管的趋势。有证据表明,至少一些国家已经习惯性地采用了他们的内幕交易制度。当高度关注监管制度的制度化,而不承诺或接受这些机构旨在实现的规范性目标时,就会出现监管仪式。如果国家的内幕交易制度只是仪式式地采用(例如,接受地缘政治的胡萝卜或避免地缘政治的大棒),那么比较分析应该考虑到这些制度可能无法反映其公民(或市场)的生活经验或规范性承诺这一事实。本文通过考虑可以从全球经验中吸取的教训,帮助美国改革我们的内幕交易法。第一部分阐述了美国内幕交易制度需要改革的理由。第二部分描绘了20世纪全球内幕交易监管的兴起。第三部分总结了全球(如日本、欧洲、中国、俄罗斯、印度、加拿大、澳大利亚和巴西)代议制的重要特征。第四部分指出了内幕交易监管的普遍性趋势,并考虑了学者和监管机构从这一趋势中得出的一些道德和经济结论。第五部分确定了监管仪式的问题,以及它对全球执行和遵从的影响。然后,第六部分转向建设性的实践,确定可以从监管内幕交易的全球经验中学到什么,并着眼于改革美国政权。
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Regulatory Ritualism and Other Lessons from the Global Experience of Insider Trading Law
There is growing consensus that the insider-trading regime in the United States, the oldest in the world, is in need of reform. Indeed, three reform bills are currently before Congress, and one recently passed the House with overwhelming bipartisan support. As the U.S. considers paths to reforming its own insider trading laws, it would be remiss to ignore potential lessons from global experimentation and innovation, particularly in light of the fact that so many insider trading regimes have been recently adopted around the world. Any such comparative study should, however, be cautious in drawing its conclusions. Reformers should pay close attention to the political, social, and economic motivations that might explain the recent trend toward near-universal adoption of insider trading regulations around the globe. Evidence suggests that at least some countries have adopted their insider trading regimes ritualistically. Regulatory ritualism occurs where great attention is paid to the institutionalization of a regulatory regime without commitment to or acceptance of the normative goals that those institutions are designed to achieve. If countries' insider trading regimes are adopted only ritualistically (e.g., to receive geopolitical carrots or to avoid geopolitical sticks), then comparative analysis should account for the fact that these regimes may not reflect its citizens' (or markets') lived experience or normative commitments. This Article aids the effort of reforming our insider-trading laws here in the United States by considering lessons that can be learned from the global experience. Part I makes the case that the insider-trading regime in the U.S. is in need of reform. Part II charts the global rise of insider trading regulation in the twentieth century. Part III summarizes important features of representative regimes around the globe (e.g., in Japan, Europe, China, Russia, India, Canada, Australia, and Brazil). Part IV notes the trend toward universality in insider trading regulations and considers some of the moral and economic conclusions scholars and regulators have drawn from this trend. Part V identifies the problem of regulatory ritualism, and its implications for global enforcement and compliance. Part VI then turns to the constructive exercise of determining what can be learned from the global experience of regulating insider trading with an eye to reforming the American regime.
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