As an American liberal, I don't know very many arguments for why we shouldn't regulate investment banks. Specifically like limiting derivatives trading, preventing credit default swaps, but also or either in a general sense, or to do with other investment banking issues.
I don't care what investment banks do, so long as we don't bail them out when they fall on their butts. Not all derivative trading is evil, you know. Not all credit default swaps were evil, either.
I can't find any that are non-pundit based arguments that would hold up in a debate against ivy league debaters.
Might any of you know of any good arguments for why we should not have more regulation have deregulation specifically in the investment banking sector?
Or to even point me in the right direction towards some conservative blog, a good columnist, that sort of thing.
Your help is much appreciated.
Regulation leads to higher costs of business. This means BofA might do something like institute a $5 per month charge on account holders with low balances. That's one issue. We have SEC rules in place that make it a crime to commit fraud, secondly. To the extent that some of the mortgage pools were fraudulently advertised to investors and rating agencies, people should be in jail. Start putting those guys in jail, and they'll stop. You don't need new regulations to do this.
The credit default swap game was risky, and they all knew it. Some people made billions, some like AIG lost their asses. When you take a small amount of risk and multiply it a few thousand times, the numbers get rather large. Why put taxpayers on the hook for those losses? AIG investors should have lost, Citi investors should have lost, etc. But no bailouts.
Lastly, investment banks are smarter than politicians 99% of the time. So far more often than not, the legislation is ill-drafted to regulate, has consequences that punish lots of firms that aren't doing things out of line, and doesn't fully stop or foresee the next ingenius derivation of products that get around the legislation. So why keep doing it?
Frank Dodd, for example, is poised to literally cripple the capital markets because of its idiotic requirement that issuers take down 5% of new bonds they issue. Ridiculous. The capital market is easily 100 times larger than the stock market. This will effect credit cards, mortgages, auto loans, etc. The issuers that can still issue after this legislation is passed, because of the added 5% burden up front, will simply raise the rates on the loans they charge consumers. You haven't accomplished anything.