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Articles

Resilient blunderers: credit rating fiascos and rating agencies’ institutionalized status as private authorities

 

ABSTRACT

The authority of credit rating agencies (CRAs) has been surprisingly resilient even in the face of recurrent, widely recognized and severe rating failures. This contribution analyses why rating fiascos have had little impact on CRAs’ status as transnational private authorities. This resilience is not only owing to CRAs’ own (genuinely private) sources of authority. Rather, previous public authorization of CRAs as quasi-regulators and the path-dependent politics of post-fiasco re-regulation have institutionally entrenched and legitimated their status as private authorities. Relying on a historical institutionalist approach and focusing on the regulatory setting of the European Union (EU), the article retraces how flawed public policy choices in the past, i.e., granting CRAs a recognized regulatory role, and non-intended institutional dynamics have spawned later regulatory dilemmas in dealing with CRAs’ rating fiascos. Thus, CRAs’ recent mistakes have paradoxically fostered a progressive institutionalization rather than a downgrade of their role as private governors.

Notes

1 Political actors, including private agents, have authority when the addressees of their actions recognize that these actors can make competent judgments and binding decisions. They exercise authority in that they successfully claim the right to perform governance functions like the formulation of rules and rule monitoring, implementation or enforcement (Zürn et al. Citation2012: 70, 86).

2 Jürgen Klute (EP Member, 2010), in: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/de/news-room/content/20100607FCS75591/9/html/Die-Rating-Agenturen-spielen-eine-Rolle-die-ihnen-eigentlich-nicht-zusteht (accessed March 2014). All following translations of non-English quotes are mine.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Andreas Kruck

Biographical note: Andreas Kruck is assistant professor of global governance at the Institute for Political Science, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich.

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