The financial services industry has changed
significantly over the past 60 years, but federal and state laws
have not. Now that Congress is seriously considering changing how
commercial banks, investment banks, and insurance companies
interact, it is important to recognize that the industry no longer
can be defined as it once was. The current regulatory approach is
based on clearly defined institutions that provide specific and
easily identifiable products. Today, however, the distinction
between financial services and other commercial activities is less
clear than it once was. A new paradigm for overseeing and
deregulating this changing industry is needed.
The
first step Congress should take in defining this new paradigm is to
distinguish between the limited and expressed responsibilities of
the federal government and the residual responsibilities of the
states--an issue that has been debated since the United States was
founded. The U.S. Constitution was written and adopted precisely
because the proper balance between the state and federal
governments had not been clearly established by the Articles of
Confederation. In the current realm of financial services, the
debate centers on two key questions:
-
What is the proper
balance between state sovereignty and the federal government's
constitutional duty to ensure free interstate commerce?
-
How can the delicate
balance between these two levels of government be maintained to
protect individual liberty while promoting economic prosperity
through a free and open financial services market?
Financial services firms depend on
sophisticated networks of transactions and deposits that cross
state lines and even extend outside the United States. Defining the
proper role for the states and the federal government in overseeing
such a diverse economic sector will not be easy, but it is
necessary if Congress is to facilitate the integration and
modernization of financial services.
Legal tests can help Members of Congress
uncover protectionist intent, discriminatory effects, or
extraterritorial overreach in a financial activity; determine the
proper responsibilities of state and federal regulators; and offer
a sound course of action. Specifically, these tests should
examine:
-
Legal precedent. Do the Constitution or statutes passed
pursuant to it serve as legal precedent for prohibiting state
action in a given field?
-
Historical pattern of
regulation. Has the industry or
activity historically been regulated at the federal, state, or
local level?
-
Technological complexity and
"network externalities" (costs and benefits that accrue to
groups not directly responsible for deregulation). In sophisticated
modern markets (especially complex, interlocking national
networks), are there negative effects associated with
state-by-state regulation?
-
Interstate scope. Is the industry or activity clearly
interstate in nature and scope?
-
Level of interstate
spillover. Will state actions
result in "substantial spillover effects" that adversely affect
interstate commerce?
-
National need. Is there a clear and overriding national
need for congressional action?
State and federal policymakers should use
these legal tests to help strike the proper balance between state
sovereignty and federal oversight of interstate commerce. As these
tests are applied to the financial services industry, it should
become clear that, in general:
-
The federal government has the
constitutional responsibility to oversee the commerce of financial
services. The commercial aspect of financial services
firms involves activities that are necessary to ensure that they
function as safe, sound institutions. Commercial activities of
financial services firms necessitate intricate interstate networks,
create extensive interstate spillovers, and are the backbone of the
nation's monetary system.
-
The states should retain the
right to regulate the business aspects of the financial services
industry. The business or industry of financial services
involves the actual products sold to the public. These may be
annuities, insurance policies, checking or savings accounts, or
securities. In any case, the sale of the actual product and the
actual delivery of that product can be pinned to specific
geographic locations. Therefore, it is appropriate that states
regulate the business or industrial activity of financial service
firms within their borders.
-
The federal government has the
constitutional responsibility to ensure interstate
commerce. Specifically, the
federal government should retain the right to preempt state
regulations proscriptively when they interfere with interstate
commerce. This does not mean, however, that the federal government
has the right or responsibility to promulgate such regulations
prescriptively.
Although the business and commerce of
financial services cannot be separated entirely from each other in
practice, such a distinction is necessary if Congress is to define
the proper roles for the federal and state governments in
overseeing these activities. Given the current division of
entrenched regulatory power, this will not be easy. But if Members
of Congress follow the principle and process of federalism, the
American financial services industry can enter the 21st century
renewed, reinvigorated, and unburdened by outmoded constraints.
John S. Barry is a former Economic Policy
Analyst at The Heritage Foundation.