Public and Private Enforcement of Securities Laws: Resource-Based Evidence
55 Pages Posted: 11 Jul 2007 Last revised: 13 Jan 2015
Date Written: March 16, 2009
Abstract
Ascertaining which enforcement mechanisms work to protect investors has been both a focus of recent work in academic finance and an issue for policy-making at international development agencies. According to recent academic work, private enforcement of investor protection via both disclosure and private liability rules goes hand in hand with financial market development, but public enforcement fails to correlate with financial development and, hence, is unlikely to facilitate it. Our results confirm the disclosure result but reverse the results on both liability standards and public enforcement. We use securities regulators' resources to proxy for regulatory intensity of the securities regulator. When we do, financial depth regularly, significantly, and robustly correlates with stronger public enforcement. In horse races between these resource-based measures of public enforcement intensity and the most common measures of private enforcement, public enforcement is overall as important as disclosure in explaining financial market outcomes around the world and more important than private liability rules. Hence, policymakers who reject public enforcement as useful for financial market development are ignoring the best currently-available evidence.
Keywords: investor protection, public enforcement, private enforcement, securities regulation
JEL Classification: D21, G14, G18, G24, G28, G32, G34, G38, K22
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Insider Trading Restrictions and Analysts' Incentives to Follow Firms
By Robert M. Bushman, Joseph D. Piotroski, ...
-
By Arturo Bris
-
When No Law is Better than a Good Law
By Utpal Bhattacharya and Hazem Daouk
-
When No Law is Better Than a Good Law
By Utpal Bhattacharya and Hazem Daouk
-
Insider Trading Laws and Stock Price Informativeness
By Nuno Fernandes and Miguel A. Ferreira
-
Do Insider Trading Laws Matter? Some Preliminary Comparative Evidence
-
Do Insider Trading Laws Matter? Some Preliminary Comparative Evidence
-
Variation in the Intensity of Financial Regulation: Preliminary Evidence and Potential Implications