Few doubt that executive compensation arrangements encouraged the excessive risk taking by banks that led to the recent Financial Crisis. Accordingly, academics and lawmakers have called for the reform of banker pay practices. In this Article, we argue that regulator pay is to blame as well, and that fixing it may be easier and more effective than reforming banker pay. Regulatory failures during the Financial Crisis resulted at least in part from a lack ofsufficient incentives for examiners to act aggressively to prevent excessive risk. Bank regulators are rarely paid for performance, and in atypical cases involving performance bonus programs, the bonuses have been allocated in highly inefficient ways. We propose that regulators, specifically bank examiners, be compensated with a debt-heavy mix of phantom bank debt and equity, as well as a separate bonus linked to the timing of the decision to take over a bank. Our pay-forperformance approach for regulators would help reduce the incidence of future regulatory failures. * Professor of Law, University of Chicago Law School (toddh@uchicago.edu). t Howard Zhang Faculty Research Scholar and Professor of Law, Boston University School of Law (fredtung@bu.edu). For helpful comments, we are grateful to Robert Bench, Eric Biber, Chris Brummer, Abe Cable, Anthony Casey, John Crawford, Aziz Huq, Saul Levmore, Anup Malani, Susan Morse, Eric Posner, Eric Rasmusen, Amanda Rose, Larry Ribstein, David Walker, and Charles Whitehead, as well as workshop participants at Boston College Law School, Pace University School of Law, University of Chicago Law School, and the 2011 Roger Traynor Summer Professorship Program at Hastings College of the Law. Osama Hamdy, University of Chicago Law School 2012, provided excellent research assistance.
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