March 2009
Politicians miss the point on regulation
A risk manager at a large European bank now being propped up by its government after losing billions explains how the bank’s executives used to think about regulation. One question, he recalls, used to dominate its dealmakers’ meetings with the bank’s own legal counsel: “Can we get away with this?” No one ever asked: “Should we be doing this?”
It is easy to pour scorn on Angela Merkel, Nicolas Sarkozy, Gordon Brown and the other European members of the G20 for portraying Februarys Berlin meeting as achieving any significant progress towards building a new and resilient architecture for global financial market regulation.
If you could go back in time and put a regulatory framework in place that would have prevented the calamity now engulfing the world financial system, it still would not focus on hedge funds or offshore tax havens. In pursuing these targets, the European leaders risk appear to be pursuing their own narrow ideological preoccupations and national self-interests.
The implication seems to be that it was the unregulated that are responsible for the mess we are in and that they took advantage of gaps in global regulation where no rules applied. But this is simply wrong.
Rather, it was a colossal failure...
Please log in now to view.
Enter your username (email address) and password at the top right-hand side of euromoney.com.
If you do not currently have access to this content, visit the subscription page or call our hotline on +44 (0)207 779 8999.
Subscribe online now and save up to 30%
If you are a trialist or subscriber, please enter your username and password at the top right-hand side of euromoney.com
Subscribers to Euromoney benefit from:
- 12 months access in print and online - on euromoney.com, read the latest issue early online, search for specific developments by region or sector, interrogate the results of Euromoney's benchmark polls, and view the archive dating back to 1996
- More than 30 specialist research guides free
- The results of Euromoneys polls and surveys
- Tailored RSS news feeds direct to your desktop
- News delivered directly to your mobile device or PC
- Personalised email newsfeed of 'Top stories' and 'Breaking news'
Click here to subscribe