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Wright was speaking at the Securities and Futures Commission's 2014 regulatory forum in Hong Kong when he said that Asia needs to have "one voice" in pushing back on the "policy preference" being exported from the US and Europe. Wright said that the actions of the US and EU had set a dangerous precedent that could have longer-term consequences as global markets develop. "Today we have two big sharks in the pond. As they draw up rules, they say 'abide by our rules or you won't do any business with the US or EU'. Effectively the rest of the world is a regulatory taker and that's not fair. Fast forward 10 years when there are more big markets, what's to stop China, Brazil, India or Indonesia saying 'if you want to do business with us here's our rulebook'?"Another problem is that whoever goes first, their rules apply so without symmetrical timing of political decision making you will have a first-mover advantage by whoever gets in with their rules, which isn't satisfactory", he said.
Ashley Alder, chief executive of the Securities and Futures Commission, described how the increasing influence of countries in Asia meant that Asia needed a stronger voice. He quoted a paragraph in a document published by the Transatlantic Economic Council – a forum to encourage dialogue between the US and EU about transatlantic financial reform – which he described as "sinister". "Going forward it's increasingly likely that only when the US and EU act in unison will they be well positioned to export their policy preferences", he said. Alder added that the export of policy preferences from the EU and US "may well not be appropriate and may in fact be quite destructive".
The knock-on consequences of fragmented and dysfunctional global markets as a result of uncoordinated regulation would be severe, according to panellists at last Friday's forum. They noted that 15 per cent of GDP had been lost since the financial crisis and the huge infrastructure requirements in Asia meant that well-functioning global markets were of vital importance."Is there potential for the G-20 reforms to backfire by fragmenting markets and further reducing cross-border liquidity which means that the $747 billion per year infrastructure hole in Asia is harder to fill?" asked Alder. "As the hole can't be filled by bank finance alone it needs to be helped by capital markets."
IOSCO's Wright called for a global institution to deal with consistency. "We don't have institutions at a global level with legally binding powers and that has just about worked so far but in a world where we will have many more big powers, will everybody play by the rules? We need to think hard about an institutional framework to guarantee that."
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