Eakinomics: Now I
Remember Why I’m A Small Government Conservative
Some people have an unerring policy sense for true north. They fall out of
bed, fall out of escrow, fall out of love, fall off a barstool, … whatever …
and know exactly what they believe and why. Eakinomics is a bit squishier and
prone to moments of self-doubt. But the world has a way getting one oriented
again.
I’m a small government conservative. Especially on Wednesday.
Monday brought this gem, courtesy of the Week in Regulation by Dan Goldbeck and
Dan Bosch: “The most noteworthy rule of the week was DOT’s final rule on ‘Qualifications of
Drivers; Vision Standard.’ Under current standards, prospective commercial
motor vehicle (CMV) drivers that do not meet the established threshold of
visual acuity would have to actively apply for an exemption. This rule
adjusts that threshold to essentially grant automatic DOT approval to
relevant CMV drivers.” WHAAAAAT! Call me old-fashioned, but I think that if
you are blind and dream only of being a CMV driver, you should not get an
automatic approval. Just saying.
Ok, that is a bit unfair. What is actually going on is that they have de facto simply lowered
the visual acuity standard by automatically approving a certain group of
exemptions. (A very tiny group – “less than 0.1 percent” of the nationwide
pool of drivers per DOT.) But why not simply have a rule that lowers the
visual acuity standard? This is your Department of Transportation at work.
Every day.
Tuesday produced this bold initiative, courtesy of The Wall Street Journal:
“The U.S. Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network has
proposed a new rule that would allow banks to share so-called suspicious
activity reports [SARs] more readily with foreign affiliates. The proposed
rule, which FinCEN announced Monday, would create a pilot program to allow
banks to share SARs with foreign branches and affiliates, a bid to improve
financial institutions’ ability to counter money laundering.” Thomas Wade in
his primer on anti-money laundering reports that
“participating banks spent $2.4 billion and employed 14,000 individuals
specifically to meet anti-money laundering compliance requirements.”
Having hired all these people and spent all this money to produce billions of
SARs data points, the banks send it all to FinCEN, which does nothing.
NOTHING. Wade reported that about 4 percent of SARs were followed up by
FinCEN with 0.44 percent (yes, 44 out of every 10,000) in turn followed up by
law enforcement. A system to share these data points internationally could
only be less effective. The fact that it is optional guarantees it will be
completely ignored and makes this announcement so much wasted air. And
redundant wasted air, since the banks’ internal risk management controls will
already flag any suspicious activity both nationally and internationally as
appropriate. This is your Department of the Treasury at work. Every day.
This is your mind-numbingly stupid, expensive federal government in action.
Every day.
It is Wednesday. I’m a small government conservative.
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