With the heated back and forth of the health reform, very little has been reported on the new financial reform bill….Sen. Dodd and some Repub from Tennessee are quietly negotiating for the passage of a financial reform bill….now that it is pretty close Dodd has hit the airways to try and block any “tea bag”-esque attacks that the health reform bill has received.
I was going to write a piece trying to explain Dodd’s lame attempt to regulate the thieves but the Washington Post beat me to it and theirs is a lot simple and more understandable than mine would have been:
1 A Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, housed inside the Federal Reserve, would write and enforce rules protecting borrowers from abuse by lenders.
WHAT IT MEANS: The location of the agency is a nod to Republicans and conservative Democrats who oppose the creation of a free-standing consumer agency, but everything else about this proposal is designed to please liberals, giving the consumer agency sweeping powers and imposing few checks on that authority.
2 A Financial Stability Oversight Council, chaired by the Treasury secretary, would coordinate federal efforts to identify and manage risks to the financial system and the broader economy.
What it means: Dodd wanted to give the council broad responsibility for policing systemic risks. After massive administration pressure, he agreed instead to give much of that power to the Fed. The oversight council will instead function essentially as the Fed’s board of directors on regulatory issues, signing off on its decisions.
3 A new process would allow for the liquidation of large, failing financial firms.
WHAT IT ME ANS: Companies could be liquidated by joint agreement of the Treasury Department, the Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which already administers bank failures and would play a similar role in the new process. Costs would be paid from a $50 billion pool of money gathered from large financial companies.
4 Credit-rating agencies would be regulated and liable for errors.
WHAT IT MEANS: Breaking with the administration and the House version of financial reform, Dodd’s bill would hold Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and other rating agencies potentially liable for their judgments about the safety of bonds and other investments. The industry also would be regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
5 Banks would face new limits on trading and investment activities.
WHAT IT MEANS: The bill would restrict banks from running their own investment portfolios or hedge funds, an administration proposal known as the “Volcker Rule” that Dodd initially had rejected. The bill also would regulate the massive trade in derivatives, increasing the proportion of such trades that are publicly reported.
6 Some renovations would be made to the structure of federal banking regulation.
WHAT IT MEANS: Dodd abandoned his earlier proposal to create a single banking regulator after critics argued that the upside was not worth the effort. The bill still would eliminate the Office of Thrift Supervision. The Fed’s authority over smaller banks would be split between the FDIC and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
Is something better than nothing? I hear a lot of the henceforths and heretowiths …..in other words legal-ese and the “too big to fail” group will still have its relief valve….US, we will still be on the hook whenever they screw up….I guess it is a start….but like health reform…..it is NOT reform….it is a tweak of an already broken system.
The “to big to fail” myth is the one that destroys everything in its path.
Legislation is largely pointless because giant corporations employ whole armies of financial whizz kids and lawyers to tease out the loopholes – and there are ALWAYS lots of those that the less astute government employees are inevitably certain to provide.
The BIG things that CAN be done and are SIMPLE to implement are these….
1. Create a TRULY free market where failure WILL result in instant demise of a company. In fact, if a large and important organisation is about to fail, then maybe the Fed should simply and legally “asset strip” it into public ownership, replace ALL senior management (without payment) and then sell it off again (at a profit) once it is stable and going forward once more – small investors could be protected. Done like that, the $50 billion fund MIGHT be close to being enough to operate with.
2. Encourage and artificially (where it doesn’t exist) create and then ENFORCE competition and OUTLAW any and all forms of protectionism for companies (eg: health insurance companies – where premiums would quickly halve!)
3. STOP pretending governments can protect THE PEOPLE against these jerks! It CAN’T! TELL the public the TRUTH – their own COMMON SENSE is their very best and ONLY effective protection. Explain honestly that – like the corporations, if they screw up, they fail!
Damn! Some excellent ideas….maybe we should let you write the bill…it seems you are more capable than the jerks in Washington……….
Yeah… I wish! Nevertheless, my motto is that simple almost ALWAYS has a better chance of working than complicated. Use the market’s own forces to control it (we’re back to the Judo principles I have mentioned in the past).
Thank you for the compliment, but being more capable than the jerks in Washington (or London) isn’t exactly hard, is it? 😆
Well….NO……it would not be that hard…….lol
http://lobotero.wordpress.com/market-reform………I would like to get your opinion on this page of mine..
Unfortunately, how do you get a bunch of people who by-and-large have been trained to get paid to talk by the hour (lawyers) to focus on results-driven legislation? You don’t. They focus on spin and hot air, and hope enough sheep follow…
Hello LOUDelf…..oh could not agree more and we and Quin have been talking about the “evils” of our lawyer system……
Oh, Loudelf! I agree – but that’s simple to fix – shoot the f*cking lot of them! Personally, I at least wasn’t particularly talking about legislating anyway – I was talking about actually DOING something for a change.