The proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency "will be funded by fees, appropriations, and other transfers," Treasury spokesman Andrew Williams said yesterday. Firms with assets of more than $10 billion "will pay more for prudential and consumer supervision, while community banks will not pay any more for supervision than they do today. Non-banks will be assessed for the first time."All regulation must be paid for by someone. There are two options: public or private. Public means taxpayers; private means corporations. If this regulation is necessary because corporations are putting consumers in danger, then that causal relationship implies that the firms should pay. Moreover, it probably isn't fair for all taxpayers to take on the burden, as some people use more financial products than others. If banks pay, then those fees will just be passed on to its customers anyway. That means, ultimately, the consumers who use the most financial products will be exposed to more of the cost. So corporations might as well pay, but which ones? Why not charge all banks instead of just the big ones? Here, we should think about competition. Regulation generally gives larger firms a competitive advantage. Big banks will have an easier time putting regulation into place, given their sophistication. They also have more money to pay for the costs involved in implementing new regulatory requirements. As a result, regulation tends to put smaller firms at a disadvantage. What this plan would do, however, is reduce that disadvantage. Big banks would be subject to additional regulatory fees to their increases costs, small banks would not. Those even higher costs should make it more difficult for big banks to achieve a competitive advantage over small ones due to the regulation. Again, I'm not saying that this regulation is necessarily a good idea. Ultimately, financial products will be more expensive. If you think that increase in price is worth whatever safety the government manages to provide to consumers, then you probably support the CFPA. If not, then you probably dislike the idea. However, if you're going to support it, making big banks pay seems quite sensible.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2009/08/big-banks-should-pay-for-new-regulation/23279/
