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| title | chunk | source | category | tags | date_saved | instance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conflict of interest | 6/10 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conflict_of_interest | reference | science, encyclopedia | 2026-05-05T04:27:55.281412+00:00 | kb-cron |
=== Finance industry and economists === Economists (unlike other professions such as sociologists) do not formally subscribe to a professional ethical code. Close to 300 economists have signed a letter urging the American Economic Association (the discipline's foremost professional body), to adopt such a code. The signatories include George Akerlof, a Nobel laureate, and Christina Romer, who headed Barack Obama's Council of Economic Advisers. This call for a code of ethics was supported by the public attention the documentary Inside Job (winner of an Academy Award) drew to the consulting relationships of several influential economists. This documentary focused on conflicts that may arise when economists publish results or provide public recommendations on topics that affect industries or companies with which they have financial links. Critics of the profession argue, for example, that it is no coincidence that financial economists, many of whom were engaged as consultants by Wall Street firms, were opposed to regulating the financial sector. In response to criticism that the profession not only failed to predict the 2008 financial crisis but may actually have helped create it, the American Economic Association has adopted new rules in 2012: economists will have to disclose financial ties and other potential conflicts of interest in papers published in academic journals. Backers argue such disclosures will help restore faith in the profession by increasing transparency which will help in assessing economists' advice. Economist Joseph Stiglitz argued that the Great Recession was partly created because, "Bankers acted greedily because they had incentives and opportunities to do so". They did this by making consumer financial products, like retail banking services and home mortgages, complex to enable charging higher fees. While more informed consumers may have been able to find better options than the major bank's primary offerings, many did not, which may have contributed to the financial industry's increased profits. Stiglitz has faced criticism over a conflict of interest and violating Columbia University's transparency policies by not disclosing his status as a paid consultant to the Argentinian government, while writing articles defending Argentina's planned default on over $1 billion in bond debt during the 1998–2002 Argentine great depression. He has also been criticized for failing to disclose his paid consultancy to the Greek government while downplaying the risk of Greece defaulting on its debt during the Greek government-debt crisis of 2009. Some economists have argued that a major portion of this increase and a driving force behind the Great Recession was the influence of money in politics. Between 1998 and 2008, the finance industry contributed an estimated $1.7 billion to political campaigns and spent $3.4 billion on lobbying, totaling $5.1 billion. Some argue this financial influence created conflicts of interest for legislators and the U.S. President, who may have been disincentivized from enacting policies that would negatively impact the finance industry, rather than protecting the public.
=== Finance industry and elected officials === Conflicts of interest among elected officials are part of the story behind the increase in the percentage of U.S. corporate domestic profits captured by the finance industry (depicted in the accompanying figure).
From 1934 to 1985, the finance industry's share of U.S. domestic corporate profit averaged 13.8%. This increased to 23.5% between 1986 and 1999, and further increased to 32.6% between 2000 and 2010. Part of this increase may be due to increased efficiency from banking consolidation and innovations in new financial products, which benefit consumers. However, if most consumers had refused to accept financial products they did not understand (e.g. negative amortization loans), the finance industry would not have been as profitable as it has been, and the Great Recession might have been avoided or postponed. If the finance industry's increased profit share from 23.5% to 32.6% is only attributed to governmental actions (subject to conflicts of interest created by campaign contributions), this suggests that the finance industry realized $270 billion in profit. This figure implies a return of over $50 for every $1 spent on political campaigns and finance industry lobbying. On a per capita basis, this would amount to almost $1,000 per U.S. resident. Few other investments have yielded such a high return in such a short time.
=== Government officials ===