The Private Interests of Public Officials: Financial Regulation in the US Congress

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Abstract

Legislators' private financial holdings affect policy decisions. Due to financial self-interest, we theorize that legislators whose personal investment portfolios include equities from firms affected by proposed policies vote for legislation that benefits those firms. We also theorize that legislators with greater personal exposure to equity investments support policies that benefit equities markets generally. We create a novel data set of legislators' personal stock investments and examine major congressional actions since the 1990s on financial deregulation and market intervention. US House members who own stocks in firms who benefit from financial deregulation vote for deregulation. House members with greater exposure to financial and automotive stocks support the financial and auto bailouts, respectively. General exposure to equities markets is also associated with support for key legislation boosting markets. The normative implications are significant, as legislators' private interests influence decisions in the public sphere.

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Carr Peterson, J., & Grose, C. R. (2021). The Private Interests of Public Officials: Financial Regulation in the US Congress. Legislative Studies Quarterly, 46(1), 49–84. https://doi.org/10.1111/lsq.12294

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