Clarity Act Risks Regulation Without Oversight, Brookings Fellow Says

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Latest developments: Klein argued the Commodity Futures Trading Commission faces a dramatically larger mandate as lawmakers consider expanding its authority over digital assets. Klein recently joined Rebecca Rettig and Renato Mariotti on CoinDesk’s The Policy Protocol.

  • Klein said the CFTC was originally created to oversee commodity futures markets and was not built for the scale of responsibilities envisioned under current crypto legislation.
  • He warned that giving the agency new powers without additional staff, funding and expertise could create the appearance of regulation without meaningful oversight.
  • Klein expressed concern that regulatory capacity has been weakened by personnel departures and structural changes at the agency.

What this means: The debate over the Clarity Act is increasingly becoming a debate over whether the CFTC can effectively police crypto markets.

  • Klein said one lesson from the Dodd-Frank era is that assigning major responsibilities across multiple regulators can create delays and confusion.
  • He argued that fragmented oversight risks repeating past regulatory failures if agencies lack the resources or will to enforce rules.
  • Klein compared those risks to shortcomings he believes contributed to past financial crises.

The controversy: Klein sharply criticized allegations that political influence is affecting financial regulation.

  • Referring to a New York Times report discussed during the interview, Klein said regulators should remain independent from political intervention.
  • He argued that enforcement decisions should not be influenced by relationships with the White House or political figures.
  • Klein described the current environment as unusually permissive toward financial misconduct and called for stronger accountability.

Reading between the lines: Klein sees a longer-term solution in closer coordination between U.S. market regulators.

  • He said the U.S. is unusual in maintaining separate capital markets regulators through the SEC and CFTC.
  • Klein argued that eventually merging the agencies would make sense, though he expressed skepticism that Congress is prepared to pursue that path.
  • In the meantime, he praised reports that SEC and CFTC staff may share office space, saying physical proximity can improve collaboration more than formal agreements.

What comes next: Regulatory structure could become as important as the rules themselves.

  • Klein said memorandums of understanding between agencies often fail to produce meaningful cooperation in practice.
  • He argued that stronger coordination mechanisms and operational integration would better prepare regulators for overseeing crypto and prediction markets.

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