Abstract
Information Sharing and Financial Market Regulation: Understanding the Capability Gap
Djoko Sigit Sayogo, Theresa Pardo, and Peter Bloniarz
6th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance (ICEGOV2012) ,
October 22-25, 2012,
In testimony on April of 2012 before the House Financial
Services Committee, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) Chairman, Mary Schapiro, stated that effective information
sharing between financial market actors and their regulatory
bodies is critical to fulfilling the regulatory obligations of the
SEC. The 2008 financial crisis is recognized as a show case for
the risks to the stability of the markets that ineffective information
sharing among supervisory authorities represents. This paper
constitutes a preliminary exploration of the challenges facing
financial regulators building on prior research in the computing
and information science community (CIS). Current literature as
well as data from a recent study of financial market regulation is
used to identify key actors in financial market regulation
information sharing relationships and to begin to outline the
challenges faced in this unique context and the resulting risk if
those challenges go unaddressed. A recently developed theoretical
framework for cross-boundary information sharing (Garcia et al
2007) is used to present insights about challenges and risks from
the literature and the field.

