The Ethics of Credit Rating Agencies: What Happened and the Way Forward
Steven Scalet () and
Thomas Kelly ()
Journal of Business Ethics, 2012, vol. 111, issue 4, 477-490
Abstract:
During the short span of a few months in 2008, 14 trillion dollars of highly rated bonds fell into junk status, surprising the global financial system and accelerating an economic decline. The result was the worst fracture of the US financial system since the Great Depression. Credit rating agencies (CRAs) in particular have come under intense scrutiny as a result of this latest disaster, both domestically and internationally, including many congressional inquiries and government investigations. Most of the public and scholarly discussions about CRAs focus on reforming the financial system so that the crisis of the magnitude of the 2008 disaster will not happen again. An important overtone of industry criticisms includes a sense of ethical impropriety on the part of CRAs and ethical uncertainty about the institutional mechanisms that are currently in place. Rarely, however, are the ethics of the industry the explicit subject of analysis. In this article, we discuss the lessons from the policy debates and recent legislation to develop an account of the ethics of the CRA industry. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012
Keywords: Credit rating agencies (CRAs); Ethics; Finance; Credit crisis; SEC; Securities; Rating bonds; 2008 Subprime meltdown; Finance ethics; Business ethics; Corporate responsibility (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (14)
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DOI: 10.1007/s10551-012-1212-y
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