An FDA for Financial Innovation: Applying the Insurable Interest Doctrine to 21st Century Financial Markets – Eric A. Posner, University of Chicago Law School; E. Glen Weyl, University of Chicago; University of Toulouse, Toulouse School of Economics, revised April 4, 2012
“The financial crisis of 2008 was caused in part by speculative investment in complex derivatives. In enacting the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress sought to address the problem of speculative investment, but merely transferred that authority to various agencies, which have not yet found a solution. We propose that when firms invent new financial products, they be forbidden to sell them until they receive approval from a government agency designed along the lines of the FDA, which screens pharmaceutical innovations. The agency would approve financial products if they satisfy a test for social utility that focuses on whether the product will likely be used more often for hedging than for speculation. Other factors may be addressed if the answer is ambiguous. This approach would revive and make quantitatively precise the common-law insurable interest doctrine, which helped control financial speculation before deregulation in the 1990s.”
Related postings on financial system
Sorry, comments are closed for this post.