In the short time since President Obama was re-elected, government has
issued hundreds of new regulations. The bureaucrats never stop. There
are now more than 170,000 pages of federal regulations.
President Obama wants still more rules. Cheering on increased financial
regulation, he said, "We've got to keep moving forward." To the
president, and probably most Americans, "forward" means passing more
laws.
It is scary to think about a world without regulation. Intuition leads
us to think that without government we'd be victims of fraud, as I
explain in my latest book, "No, They Can't!" But our intuition is wrong.
Consider this: An entire sector of the economy operates almost entirely
without government controls. Complete strangers exchange big money there
every day.
It's the Internet. It does have regulation, just not government
regulation.
On my next TV show, titled "Freedom 2.0" (which the Fox Business Network
airs this Thursday at 9 p.m. EST), economics professor Ed Stringham
explains that Paypal.com, which transfers billions of dollars for
people, at first assumed they needed government help to prevent
fraud.
"They faced fraudsters from all over the world. They turned to the FBI,"
says Stringham. "But the FBI had no idea who these people were."
So PayPal invented a new form of regulation. "They developed a private
fraud detection system, where they used computers to say, 'This might be
fraudulent,' and then it would send it to a human to investigate that."
That dramatically reduced fraud, and PayPal thrived.
EBay's business model is also threatened by fraud. How can a buyer trust
that, say, a seller will actually deliver a $25 pack of baseball cards
and that the cards will be what he claims they are? In theory, you could
sue; but in practice, our legal system is too slow and costly for that.
So eBay came up with self-regulation: The buyers rate the sellers.
"EBay and other groups developed private reputation mechanisms," says
Stringham. "When you go onto eBay, you know there's a 99 percent chance
that you're going to get the goods delivered."
Private companies found they could "crowd-source" enforcement against
fraud and low-quality products, in much the same way that Wikipedia
discovered an encyclopedia could be created without a central organizer.
Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales tells me that method "works far better
than the top-down system that it replaced."
We almost always assume that top-down government regulation is
necessary, even though history says otherwise. Did you know that stock
markets began without government regulation?
Stringham researched how the first stock exchanges developed in London
in the 1700s: "Government refused to enforce all but the most simple
contracts. Nevertheless, brokers figured out how to do short sales,
futures contracts, options contracts -- even though none was enforceable
by law."
They came up with private enforcement.
"They traded in coffeehouses. And after a while, they decided: 'Let's
enforce rules within this coffeehouse. If you default, you're going to
get kicked out of the coffeehouse, and we're going to call you a lame
duck.'" (Because you had to waddle out of the coffeehouse. That's
actually where the phrase "lame duck" originated.)
Years of consumer reporting have taught me that such private regulation
is better for consumers than the piles of rules produced by our bloated
government.
Worse, government's micromanagement stifles innovation. Companies now
invest in lawyers and "compliance officers," rather than engineers and
creators.
Those that don't may get shut down.
Intrade is an innovative "prediction market" website where people bet
about future events -- who will win the Oscars, elections, etc. The
betting odds are great indicators of what will happen in the future
because people think carefully before putting their money on the
line.
But a government agency called the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
determined that Intrade's bets are "commodity options" and Intrade does
not have the right license to trade those options. The agency sued, and
Intrade decided it had to close its site to Americans. The result: We
lose knowledge -- and opportunity.
President Obama is wrong. We don't need new rules. Government should
stop adding regulations -- or try following the Stossel Law: For every
new rule, repeal two old ones.
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/political_commentary/commentary_by_john_stossel/no_regulation_no_problem
Obama is no kings don’t like to be constrained. But all government should be.Obama is Pathological Liar, He is an Ideological Liar because the true objectives of his fundamental transformation of the United States are incompatible with American democracy and tradition Obama devotion to the Machiavellian dictum of "the ends justify the means" and lying as an instrument of government policy have been the tools of political extremists throughout history.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
-
Recent presidential tradition includes leaving a handwritten letter in the Oval Office for the next man who takes the o...
No comments:
Post a Comment