As an example SOX compliance estimates came in way under the original projections. Back in 2005 I billed triple the amount of budgeted hours and the company was billed 5x original estimates.
True.
And the unintended consequences were significant. It has cost the US (and by extension the US govt) a ton of money. It really killed our capital markets and the market for new and emerging companies. Almost everyone now goes to the markets in Europe to sell stock and raise capital.
Basically, it killed an entire industry. Or forced it to be 'outsourced' abroad.
Fern
Why do people buy into the moronic paradigm that "regulations" as a whole have a specific kind of effect? The issue is what kind of regulations, not how much. The whole over/under-regulation discussion is a red herring designed to keep the public incapable of having any meaningful input to public policy.
The question ought to be what we want our regulations designed to do. Some people truly are anarchists and for them arguing against over-regulation might make sense. Most people aren't but have been hoodwinked into thinking that all regulations are an equal force for evil. Lots of people have a vague notion of what they call a "free market" which, they have heard off and on, delivers something that is efficient or optimal (although most people who use this term have no idea what that even means). These people especially are stooges in this whole discussion. Yes, some markets do achieve a reasonable approximation of a truly competitive market. Many others (large ones at that) do not. Where there are strong incentives to engage in price discrimination, hide information, profit from unpriced externalities, or deceive customers, there is a need for robust regulation in order to achieve a closer approximation to the "free market" that so many people extoll.
Now there are many other types of regulation, designed for many purposes other than efficient market function. They are less defensible from economic grounds, and more appropriately addressed in a purely political context. I've got an opinion about them, but it's not really the topic of this thread...
When a pundit talks in broad strokes about the need to "get rid of regulations", the evils of over-regulation, or on the other side, the need for more regulations to fight those evil anarchists, they are trying to get you to suspend your cerebrum and pick a side based on your gut instead. With so many intestinal appeals, is it any wonder this country is going to shit?
We see many claims here that govt regulation is burdening our businesses/economy, many argue it isn't so.
We see claims that companies are hoarding money and just being greedy, others have said they are holding off because of uncertainty.
Below is an example of burdensome and expensive new regulation that is contributing to the uncertainty. This new regulatory provision, not expected to be finalized until later this year, was stuck into the Dodd Frank bill which ostensibly about domestic banking reform. Why/how does stuff about the Congo and rebel groups belong in there?
For some reason it's hard to find this stuff in the mainstream media, it's been pretty mush ignored (except a few reports here and there about the unintended humanitarian problems this is causing - some will just stop doing business with them.)
It's a fairly long article, so I've only quoted part below.
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/14586443?f=search
So, we're running expensive foreign policy initiatives off the backs of our companies and we wonder why none want to come here, and those that are here keep leaving.
But never mind this stuff, let's keep painting schools and filing potholes' that'll fix our economy.
And nah, companies don't need to keep funds in reserve for complying with this new stuff, they can just blow their money now and borrow more if needed next year like the fed govt.
Fern
Are you saying that is a benefit?On the other hand, the compliance manager only has a job because of these rules. 🙂 $9-16B is a lot of compliance managers.
It isn't ideological at all.
In the case of this particular estimate I'm interest in the methodology they employed. It is an estimate and they do provide a range. While we can see in the case of the specific company they are taking it seriously and donating significant resources to it, but the regulations themselves have not yet been finalized, so no one knows if the estimate is close or not. But we could look at the methodology and see if it's BS. E.g., I have seen estimates where another org's number were used, but hit with a multiplier of, say, 5.5. Without a damn god reason for that, I'd say it's BS.
In any case the estimate is the least important thing here. The fairly detailed description of the work involved by this company, the uncertainty present, and the sheer number of industries/companies involved alone sufficiently demonstrates that this particular regulations is expensive and burdensome.
Fern
There is a big difference between the nominal cost of compliance and the economic cost of compliance. Government agencies often don't try to estimate the total economic cost of a regulation (the CBO is generally prohibited from doing so), and when they do their estimates are often highly politicized. Consider how the DoJ would estimate the cost of criminalizing marijuana. How do you think they would consider the economic cost of so many felony records inhibiting perfectly decent citizens from finding gainful employment? That's not even touching on the perils of estimating non-politicized secondary economic effects which themselves introduce massive errors to such estimates.These cost estimates come from these groups time and time again and they are often tenfold the estimates of the regulatory agency. The people at these regulatory agencies performing these cost estimates aren't getting paid on a sliding scale depending on the result. They are not lining their pockets in conjunction with performing these estimates. Unless there is corruption of course, which usually means they are in bed with the industry they are regulating, like what happened with the gulf oil spill. Here is just the most recent discrepancy I recall:
http://www.businessinsider.com/presi...ulation-2011-8
This BTW was the huge new emission regulation which Obama recently decided to put on hold. The cost estimate coming from the Industrial Alliance, which is essentially the same type of lobby organization as the NAOM, was 1.1 trillion versus $90 billion estimated by the EPA. I'm sure the EPA estimate could be error prone in some random way because estimating future costs is inherently error prone. Maybe there's even a pro-regulation bias in there somewhere. But these kinds of discrepancies need to be explained.
...
- wolf
Did you catch that? Essentially they are saying, "Because the market for compliance audits is not mature yet (duh!) we are going to ignore this piece of the projected cost." Pure gold. Maybe they are right, but it's silly to pretend that there is any sense in putting confidence in this estimate (or any other, to be fair, including from the other side).Depending on the state of competition in the market for independent private sector audits, the additional cost stemming from the assumption of expert liability could be passed on to issuers furnishing Conflict Minerals Reporting in the form of higher audit fees, which in turn would increase these companies cost of compliance with the statute, although, as noted, issuers could avoid such costs by not incorporating the audit report into their Securities Act filings. In any event, since this audit market is still in its nascence, and issuers presumably would not choose to incorporate the report by reference, the above effects are difficult to assess but are likely insignificant.
This "industry group" is conspicuously devoid of a footnote documenting who provided this conveniently lowball number, or what exactly they were estimating. Also, there is no description of how they solicited these estimates. How many did they solicit? How were they solicited? Were there other estimates received that aren't mentioned? Who knows? There are a couple other missing footnotes that seem a little odd - especially given how anal federal agencies [pre]tend to be about these things.Although no entity has yet conducted due diligence for its conflict minerals supply chain or obtained an audit of this due diligence, we obtained estimates from one entity that works with NGOs and one industry group of possible costs associated with conducting the due diligence and the audit based on the preliminary information they currently have. The entity that works with NGOs has estimated that the annual cost of conducting the due diligence for the four conflict minerals ranges between $20 million and $25 million. An industry group provided a much lower range of between $8 million and $10 million to set up a mineral source validation scheme.
True.
And the unintended consequences were significant. It has cost the US (and by extension the US govt) a ton of money. It really killed our capital markets and the market for new and emerging companies. Almost everyone now goes to the markets in Europe to sell stock and raise capital.
Basically, it killed an entire industry. Or forced it to be 'outsourced' abroad.
Fern
I did an internship at a particular manufacturing company - a fairly well known company with many locations. One of my job duties was testing all of the raw materials that came to the plant, right from the railroad car as it was shipped in. If someone wanted, they could have added "verify where the materials came from" and it wouldn't have added more than a couple hours to my week, if that when averaged out over a year. With plants all over the US for that manufacturer, I don't think any of the other plants would take much more time either. In other words, 2 million dollars per year per company to figure out where their raw materials came from seems a bit high to me.
It isn't ideological at all.
In the case of this particular estimate I'm interest in the methodology they employed. It is an estimate and they do provide a range. While we can see in the case of the specific company they are taking it seriously and donating significant resources to it, but the regulations themselves have not yet been finalized, so no one knows if the estimate is close or not. But we could look at the methodology and see if it's BS. E.g., I have seen estimates where another org's number were used, but hit with a multiplier of, say, 5.5. Without a damn god reason for that, I'd say it's BS.
In any case the estimate is the least important thing here. The fairly detailed description of the work involved by this company, the uncertainty present, and the sheer number of industries/companies involved alone sufficiently demonstrates that this particular regulations is expensive and burdensome.
Fern
I don't think you appreciate what the issue is here. There are mines in the Congo shipping out rare minerals which are perfectly legal for anyone in the US to use - in theory. They become "conflict minerals" if any truck driver, shipper, or agent of said shipment ever paid a bribe or unofficial "taxes" to any member of a group on a magic blacklist. Now imagine you are the chief risk officer of a company that imports alloys from a mill that uses trace ingredients which are partially sourced from a Congolese mine that is officially legal, but your supply chain doesn't have its own private army. What are you going to do?
Yes. However that doesn't mean that any and all proposed steps are worthwhile just because somebody somewhere imagined that they might have an effect on the market for conflict minerals. At the very least I would like the CBA from whichever agency was drafting the regulations being put into effect to actually have complete references for their numbers. I don't think that's too much to ask.It's worthwhile to take steps against the terrible situation about resources in the Congo.
Tell you what, I'll pay attention to you in this thread if you can demonstrate how this regulation has any-damn-thing to do with the environment in the USA.
It's foreign policy, not environmental policy.
Fern
to sum up: business tends to go where labor is cheap...
The first goal of a business is to ensure its profitability. The first goal of a politician is to ensure his own re-election. The first goal of government is to justify its own existence. Agencies and bureaucrats who produce studies showing that the shiny new legislation is so much yak caca will not long linger.
EDIT: As far as being relevant to your point: You indicated your distrust in the numbers generated by the people who have to bear the cost. I pointed out that the CBO is not a disinterested party, nor a party whose existence is based on its accuracy. The CBO's existence is predicated on its usefulness to whomever is on power. A long career is not crafted by telling the public that your bosses' new plan is stupid. (With one slight caveat; the bureaucrats do have some incentive to favor the Dems, since the Pubbies at least pretend to want to downsize government. It's entirely possible that some bureaucrats in the CBO actually still believe them.)
I wouldn't say that the CBO deliberately slants its conclusions to appease those in power. Rather, their prescribed methodology is very easy to game. For example, an easy way to get a bill's cost to come in low is include some future cuts or tax hikes before the end of the ten year window that are guaranteed (practically speaking) to be cancelled. The CBO is prohibited from considering whether anything being legislated is, in fact, likely to happen.Why don't you provide us with links to impartial, specific, well-documented case studies of instances where the CBO slanted it's conclusions to appease those in power? Or is this yet another of your baseless, moronic claims that you assume to be true?
this is true, i think to many people assume i mean get rid of all. which is retarded because i have never said that ever, not a single fucking time. i just demonize idiotic regulation, in which most environmental shit happens to fall under imo.Why do people buy into the moronic paradigm that "regulations" as a whole have a specific kind of effect? The issue is what kind of regulations, not how much. The whole over/under-regulation discussion is a red herring designed to keep the public incapable of having any meaningful input to public policy.
The question ought to be what we want our regulations designed to do. Some people truly are anarchists and for them arguing against over-regulation might make sense. Most people aren't but have been hoodwinked into thinking that all regulations are an equal force for evil. Lots of people have a vague notion of what they call a "free market" which, they have heard off and on, delivers something that is efficient or optimal (although most people who use this term have no idea what that even means). These people especially are stooges in this whole discussion. Yes, some markets do achieve a reasonable approximation of a truly competitive market. Many others (large ones at that) do not. Where there are strong incentives to engage in price discrimination, hide information, profit from unpriced externalities, or deceive customers, there is a need for robust regulation in order to achieve a closer approximation to the "free market" that so many people extoll.
Now there are many other types of regulation, designed for many purposes other than efficient market function. They are less defensible from economic grounds, and more appropriately addressed in a purely political context. I've got an opinion about them, but it's not really the topic of this thread...
When a pundit talks in broad strokes about the need to "get rid of regulations", the evils of over-regulation, or on the other side, the need for more regulations to fight those evil anarchists, they are trying to get you to suspend your cerebrum and pick a side based on your gut instead. With so many intestinal appeals, is it any wonder this country is going to shit?
to sum up: business tends to go where labor is cheap...
And workers have little to no rights.to sum up: business tends to go where labor is cheap...
to sum up: business tends to go where labor is cheap...
The reality is slightly more complicated then you seem to imply. If your assertion were completely true the continent of Africa (especially the Congo which has the lowest GDP in the world according to several sources) would be a hub of businesses (both high tech and low tech) and jobs that would rival Asia in size and scope.
Yes. However that doesn't mean that any and all proposed steps are worthwhile just because somebody somewhere imagined that they might have an effect on the market for conflict minerals.
At the very least I would like the CBA from whichever agency was drafting the regulations being put into effect to actually have complete references for their numbers. I don't think that's too much to ask.