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Economic experts appearing at a congressional hearing have urged lawmakers to carry out substantial but carefully planned financial market and institutional reforms. A House of Representatives committee held an all-day hearing Tuesday on the subject, one of a series of examinations of the U.S. financial crisis. VOA Dan Robinson reports.![]() |
| From left: Joseph Stiglitz, Joel Seligman, Manuel Johnson testifying before the House Financial Services Committee, 21 Oct 2008 |
Joseph Stiglitz, the 2001 Nobel economics prize laureate, is a strong proponent15 of an active government role:
"The de-regulatory philosophy that has prevailed during the past quarter century has no grounding in economic theory nor historical experience," said Joseph Stiglitz. "Quite the contrary, modern economic theory explains why the government must take an active role especially in regulating financial markets."
Key priorities, Stiglitz argues, should be broader reform of financial corporate16 governance, and protection for American homeowners as the U.S. economy slides deeper into recession.
Manuel Johnson, a noted17 financial accounting18 expert, argues for a cautious approach that would not, as he puts it, role back the gains made in the U.S. financial system:
"From my perspective, permanent government control over the credit allocation process is economically inefficient19 and potentially, even more unstable," said Manuel Johnson.
Joel Seligman of Columbia University says members of Congress must distinguish between emergency legislation, such as the more than $700-billion rescue package approved recently, and longer-term efforts. He urges lawmakers to organize and streamline20 their investigations:
"I would strongly urge each house of Congress to create a select committee similar to that employed after September 11th [2001], to provide a focused and less contentious21 review of what should be done," said Joel Seligman.
Economist22 Alice Rivlin urges lawmakers to, as she puts it, check their philosophical23 slogans at the door as they go to work on what she calls a difficult and painstaking24 job:
"Too many attempts to re-think regulation of financial markets in recent years have been de-railed by ideologues shouting that regulation is always bad or alternatively that we just need more of it," sid Alice Rivlin.
Tuesday's House hearing was one of several that congressional committees are holding on the financial crisis ahead of the U.S presidential election on November 4
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