CIRJE-F-158 | "The Legislative Dynamic: Evidence from the Deregulation of Financial Services in Japan" |
Author Name | Miwa, Yoshiro and J. Mark Ramseyer |
Date | July 2002 |
Full Paper | PDF file@ |
Remarks | Subsequently published in Foote ed., Law in Japan: A Turning Point?, University of Washington Press 2007, 153-189 . |
Abstract |
In many ways, the current financial distress in Japan traces itself to the limited range of non-bank financial intermediaries available. That limited availability is itself a creature of regulation. By examining the recent deregulation of commercial paper issues by financial intermediaries, we explore the dynamics of the regulatory process that originally contributed to -- if not caused -- the current distress. We also use this case study to explore the dynamics of the Japanese legislative and regulatory process more generally. We characterize deregulation as a bargain between banks and the newer non-bank intermediaries: the banks acquiesced to commercial paper issues by non-banks, while the non-banks agreed to the regulatory jurisdiction of the Ministry of Finance. The non-banks obtained a cost-effective way to raise additional funds; the banks brought their new competitors within their regulatorily enforced cartel. At a specific level, the dynamics illustrate the classic Stiglerian theory of regulation; at a more general level, they illustrate the trans-national economic logic to the Japanese legislative and regulatory process.
|