The Rebirth of Regulation

By Robert Reich  |  RobertReich.org

May 4, 2010, truthout

http://www.truthout.org/robert-reich-the-rebirth-regulation59146

What do oil giant BP, the mining company Massey Energy, and
Goldman Sachs have in common? They're all big firms involved
in massive plunder. BP's oil spill is already one of the
biggest and most damaging in American history. Massey's mine
disaster, claiming the lives of 29 miners, is one of the
worst in recent history. Goldman's alleged fraud is but a
part of the largest financial meltdown in 75 years.

All three of these companies are also publicly-held, which
means that much of the financial costs of these failures will
be passed on to their shareholders, many of whom are already
watching their stock prices plummet. Prominently among those
shareholders are pension funds and mutual funds held by
people like you and me.

That may seem fair. After all, shareholders benefitted when
BP made big profits extracting oil without paying attention
to a possible blowout, when Massey Energy got fat earnings
from its careless coal mining operations, and when Goldman
Sachs did wonderously well for its own stock holders by
allegedly defrauding others. In fact, it was pressure from
their shareholders seeking the highest possible returns - and
their executives, whose pay is linked to the firms' share
performance - that led all three companies to cut whatever
corners they could cut in pursuit of profits.

But profits aren't everything, which is why we have
regulations that are supposed to be enforced. So a key
question in each of these instances is: Where were the
regulators?

Why didn't the Department of Interior's Minerals Management
Service make sure offshore oil rigs have backup systems to
prevent blowouts? One clue: You may remember MMS's wild
drinking parties exposed during the Bush era.

Where was the Mine Safety and Health Administration before
the Upper Big Branch mine exploded? MSHA says it fined the
company for a whole string of violations, but the law didn't
allow fines high enough to deter the company. Which raises
the next question: Given Massey's record, why didn't the
Bush-era MSHA seek to change the law and increase the
penalties?

Why didn't the Securities and Exchange Commission spot fraud
on the Street when it was happening? Well, as we all now
know, the Bush SEC was asleep at the wheel.

But don't blame it all on George W. For thirty years,
deregulation has been all the rage in Washington. Even where
regulations exist, Congress has set such low penalties that
disregarding the regulations and risking fines has been
treated by firms as a cost of doing business. And for years,
enforcement budgets have been slashed, with the result that
there are rarely enough inspectors to do the job. The
assumption has been markets know best, and when they don't
civil lawsuits and government prosecutions will deter
wrongdoing.

Wrong.

When shareholders demand the highest returns possible and
executive pay is linked to stock performance, many companies
will do whatever necessary to squeeze out added profits. And
that will spell disaster - giant oil spills, terrible coal-
mine disasters, and Wall Street meltdowns - unless the nation
has tough regulations backed up by significant penalties,
including jail terms for executives found guilty of
recklessness, and vigilant enforcement.

After thirty years of deregulation, it's time for the rebirth
of regulation: Not heavy-handed and unnecessarily costly
regulation, but regulation that's up to the task of
protecting the public from companies and executives that will
do almost anything to make a buck.
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