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19 DePaul Bus. & Comm. L.J. 1 (2020-2021)

handle is hein.journals/depbcl19 and id is 1 raw text is: Misaligned Incentives in Markets:
Envisioning Finance That Benefits All of Society
Dr. Ryan Clements1
The modern financial system is plagued by misaligned incentives
that allow some firms to extract distributive profits, and direct wealth
transfers in their favor, without producing anything of value, or im-
proving society with enhanced employment or socially useful innova-
tion. Many modern financial products and activities serve no
underlying economic or productive purpose. The system is creating
market intermediaries of astounding size, power, profitability, and ec-
onomic and regulatory policy influence. Some financial firms ex-
pressly profit from heightened interconnection and complexity, while
others benefit directly from increased volatility. Yet we all bear the
costs of this evolved financial system when it unravels due to its inter-
connectedness with the real economy, and our increased reliance on
markets. This article advocates for a financial system that is de-
financialized, de-complexified, more transparent, and better orien-
tated to productive ends in a way that benefits all of society, not just
the firms who reap asymmetrical payoffs in a complex system, inter-
mediate capital, create financial products, or run the plumbing in a
system that ultimately serves them best.
This article gives support to Hyman Minsky's money manager cap-
italism hypothesis by showing how the financial system has evolved
since the 2008 crisis because of misaligned incentives. In support of
this contention the article profiles numerous post-crisis trends and
events in financial markets where misaligned incentives emerge, in-
cluding moral hazard in debt origination, how some financial firms
benefit from volatility; the real winners of the GameStop meme
stock saga; problems from price dislocations in credit exchange
traded funds (ETFs) during the coronavirus pandemic crash; conflicts
in the construction and composition of indices; market disruption
from volatility-linked exchange traded products (ETPs); misaligned
1. Assistant Professor, Chair in Business Law and Regulation at the University of Calgary
Faculty of Law. The author wishes to thank Professor Lawrence G. Baxter, Professor James D.
Cox, Professor Elisabeth D. de Fontenay, Professor Arthur E. Wilmarth, Jr., Lee Reiners, the
Duke Global Financial Markets Center, and Professor Bryce Tingle for helpful guidance and
advice. Any inaccuracies are the sole responsibility of the author.

1

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