Topic: Nature of regulations
I do not know much about regulations and how they work, so I wanted to ask about your opinion. Both with respect to the current 'regulization-mania' and with the *general* regulation for *any* entity. I am interested not only what is going on today, but how would the rules that are erected today work in over 100 years.
There is the old argument: strict regulations vs loose ones. In the latter, different companies and economical entities decide what to do depending on what they feel like. This has shown to be a more robust way in the USA than the strict regulations version - very quick adaptability to economics, it can move from point A to point B fast. And I mean this in general - and notice that I use the term adaptability, not stability. That is, the economy could change quickly, but this also allows for 'walk in the woods', where some decisions are mistakes. Thus, the way I see it, loose rules allow for mistakes but it is also pointing into fast-paced change.
But I do not want to get into this argument - not only is that I am oversimplifying my last claim, but in this forum the people will just go one way or the other. What is the stuff I am missing?
Well, for one - *who* is the one making these rules at any given time? I have heard of one 'good' regulation as a matter of fact. If I am correct, in 2001 the Auto industry in the States adopted a higher standard of car checks to ensure proper quality. This was company-enforced and it resulted in the better cars within the US as compared to the ones beforehand. Would this be something to expect more from, some of these 'cartel' regulations?
And also - how often should these regulations be checked? We like to deal with straight rules that have a yes/no answer. You either like coffee or you do not like coffee. You drive a Volkswagen or you do not drive a Volkswagen (ok, I have been interested in formal logic and other logical constructs...) This means that the rules become rigid - and over time they get old. The laws should not change too much, because that would be chaos - but what is the point of a regulations that will be too old in just 10 years or so???
Thanks for reading this, ~S