> EU directives have forced banks to modernize at a pace that wouldn't have been possible if we just let the free market decide
1) Is that automatically good? Damn those capitalists and their slow and steady approach to major changes, I suppose. Wouldn't want to proceed too thoughtfully.
2) The free market in banking looks pretty much exactly like the crypto ecosystem. As people often put it, speedrunning banking history. The only thing slowing the financial institutions down is the regulation (which is pretty much the pro-regulation argument of "if we don't regulate it they'll do a bunch of stupid things too quickly").
There isn't something of a free market in banking but the limitations are extreme enough that it is more of a heavily mixed to centralised one. Interest rates are managed by a central committee and banks provide any colour of service you like as long as it is black. Typically heavy KYC regulations to link the system to law enforcement and state intelligence systems. There is enough freedom to keep the fees fair and a bit of flexibility in what the money gets invested in which is pretty good. But for transaction speed I'd actually be a little surprised if the banks were allowed to control their own settlement timelines; I assume going to quickly would start running in to KYC-style compliance problems.
> 1) Is that automatically good? Damn those capitalists and their slow and steady approach to major changes, I suppose. Wouldn't want to proceed too thoughtfully.
Considering how long it’s taken even the most progressive regulations to be enacted, it’s arguable that we’ve done anything but proceed without thoughtfulness towards how these changes affect the other 99% of the population.
We sure do spend a lot of time letting the wealthiest folks skim those points off the top without spending any more than they are required to by regulations, though.