H.R.78 - SEC Regulatory Accountability Act115th Congress (2017-2018) |
Sponsor: | Rep. Wagner, Ann [R-MO-2] (Introduced 01/03/2017) |
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Committees: | House - Financial Services | Senate - Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs |
Latest Action: | 01/17/2017 Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs. (All Actions) |
Roll Call Votes: | There have been 6 roll call votes |
Tracker:
This bill has the status Passed House
Here are the steps for Status of Legislation:
- Introduced
- Passed House
- Passed Senate
- To President
- Became Law
Subject — Policy Area:
- Finance and Financial Sector
- View subjects
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Summary (3)
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Text (2)
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Actions (37)
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Titles (3)
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Amendments (5)
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Cosponsors (3)
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Committees (2)
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Related Bills (1)
Summary: H.R.78 — 115th Congress (2017-2018)All Bill Information (Except Text)
Shown Here:
Passed House amended (01/12/2017)
SEC Regulatory Accountability Act
(Sec. 2) This bill amends the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to direct the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to:
- before issuing a regulation under the securities laws, identify the nature and source of the problem that the proposed regulation is designed to address;
- adopt a regulation only upon a reasoned determination that its benefits justify its costs;
- identify and assess available alternatives to any regulation; and
- ensure that any regulation is accessible, consistent, written in plain language, and easy to understand.
In determining the costs and benefits of a proposed regulation, the SEC shall consider its impact on investor choice, market liquidity, and small businesses.
In addition, the SEC shall: (1) periodically review its existing regulations to determine if they are outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome; and (2) in accordance with such review, modify, streamline, expand, or repeal them.
Whenever it adopts or amends a rule that is "major" (in terms of economic impact), the SEC shall state in its adopting release: (1) the regulation's purposes and intended consequences, (2) metrics for measuring the regulation's economic impact, (3) the assessment plan to be used to assess whether the regulation has achieved its stated purposes, and (4) any foreseeable unintended or negative consequences of the regulation.