Centre for Economic Policy Research
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General discussion
Jean-Pierre Landau said that, before thinking of remedies, one must first ask why conflicts of interest arise in the first place. The Report takes the view that they develop because some firms undertake multiple functions. So, when looking at the remedies, there is a trade-off to be considered between the economies of scope generated by such a bundling of activities and the risk of conflicts of interest. Another explanation would see conflicts of interest as a by-product of the difficulty – or impossibility – of charging a proper price for services such as ratings, analysts or audit. In an efficient market one should not have to pay for information since it is already in the price. It is costly, however, to collect and process information, so the question arises as to how it gets into the price in the first place. This is a well-known paradox about market efficiency. So we could ask whether conflicts of interest result from attempts to circumvent this paradox, by getting investors to pay indirectly for information. This can be done in many ways. The first one is cross-subsidizing activities so that information can be produced, although people will not buy it for its real price. Analysts cannot recover their costs, and that is why they have been used for other purposes. This cross-subsidization is at the source of conflicts of interest. The second way is to exploit the rents created or consolidated by regulatory privileges. This is obviously the case for rating agencies. At issue here is not so much a conflict of interest but the quality of the information produced in an environment of very low competition. Discussion and Roundtables 103 Information is a public good and attempts to treat it as a private good are bound to create distortions, some of them in the form of conflicts of interest. Would it not be more appropriate to recognize from the start that we are faced with a public good problem? The goal, then, is to find the least distortive way of financing these public goods. Would partial ‘socialization’ be a solution in some cases? It might not be necessary for audit services. A mix of good governance and supervision might work. The question of paying for information does not arise in this case, because companies are legally required to have their accounts audited and pay for it. As far as rating agencies are concerned there must be a way to finance them, while at the same time taking the rents out of them. This calls for encouraging entry in that market and by helping the creation of new agencies, possibly through subsidization. In the case of analysts, a degree of public intervention is provided in the ‘New York’ settlement, by the obligation to buy research from independent firms. So the obligation to pay for information is made transparent and explicit. Landau identified this as a progressive move, since it will create and stimulate the independent research industry. He admitted that he could not see the drawbacks and questioned whether there is any empirical basis to the argument that it will lower the quality of information. After all, top qualified people – including the present Chairman of the Fed – have made a career in independent research companies. Frederic Mishkin agreed with the first part of Landau’s argument, that the impossibility of charging people for the information which may be used for multiple uses is a source of conflicts of interest. This does not mean, however, that the firm as a whole cannot charge for information. Mishkin disagreed with the second part of the comment dealing with socialization. Bundling is a way to charge for information. This is not only true for the financial services industry but also for many other industries where synergies exist between different activities or components. For example, cars come with radios and, yet, we think that the market works well. Mishkin also agreed with the view that solving the conflict of interest problem in the financial services will not solve the key corporate governance problem. He also agreed strongly with the need for market participants to be involved in the design of policy. This is exactly the way good supervisory oversight operates: public authorities should gather the view of the market participants and synthesize them in the policy framework. Alexander Swoboda said that many recent problems that have received so much attention in the popular press are not real issues of conflicts of interest; rather they reflect basis misconduct and outright crime and should be reported as such. Transparency is necessary, but not sufficient to generate adequate information. As shown by the bubble or the international financial crises, there are periods when the incentives to use the information are downplayed for psychological or other reasons. This is where it would be most important to have good rules in place because the costs of conflicts of interest are hidden during the upward part and only get revealed after the crash. It remains important to have codes of conduct and best practices, as they provide the regulator with a benchmark on which to judge whether the compensation scheme is adequate. It is difficult, however, to devise the scheme and also to ensure that it does not become a hard regulation that is stifling to the development of innovation. Antonio Borges commented on corporate governance, and pointed out that there can be a conflict of interest among shareholders. One of the key differences between the United States and Europe is the way in which companies are controlled. Companies within the United States are widely held by numerous 104 Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry shareholders and the principal-agent problem is acute. Managers sometimes act against the interests of shareholders, and get away with it. In continental Europe the vast majority of corporations are controlled by so-called reference shareholders, players with very large blocks of shares, often majorities, who have complete control over management, and who replace the agent at the slightest hint of a principal-agent problem. That is why many of the problems analysed here do not occur in Europe. The real problem in Europe is that management and majority shareholders collude against the minority shareholders. This is a real conflict of interests. Recent reports have emphasized the role of auditors, of powerful independent directors, of a strict regulation to require disclosure of transactions between corporations and officers and between corporations and significant shareholders, and the fact that there would be much less opportunity for taking advantage of minority shareholders if all of that were publicly known. Unfortunately this is not happening in continental Europe. Discussion and Roundtables 105 |
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