The Power of Weak Interests in Financial Reforms
Abstract
Dodd-Frank, the US financial reform law passed in response to the 2008 financial crisis, established
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), a new federal regulator with
the sole responsibility of protecting consumers from unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices.
This decision marked the end of a highly politicized reform debate in the US Congress,
involving lobbying from business associations and civil society groups, in which proponents
of the new bureau would normally have been considered to be much weaker than its
opponents. Paradoxically, an emerging civil society coalition successfully lobbied decisionmakers
and countered industry attempts to prevent industry capture. What explains the
fact that rather weak and peripheral actors prevailed over more resourceful and dominant
actors? The goal of this study is to examine and challenge questions of regulatory capture by
concentrated industry interests in the reform debates in response to the credit crisis which
originated in the US in 2007. The analysis suggests that for weak actors to prevail in policy
conflicts over established, resource-rich opponents, they must undertake broad coalitionbuilding
among themselves and with influential elite allies outside and inside of Congress
who share the same policy goals.
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