A little bit of Wall Street reform
The Bill that was passed in the US to reform
the banking system does not do nearly enough to rein in the Wall Street
bankers, who had caused much havoc to the world
Robert WEISSMAN
Four hundred forty-two days after Lehman Brothers declared
bankruptcy, the US House of Representatives has finally passed financial
reform legislation.
The long delay between the on set of the financial crisis - a direct
consequence of a quarter century of deregulation - and the passage of
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2009 did not well
serve the cause of reform.
As time passed, public anger over the Wall Street bailout became more
diffuse. And Wall Street relentlessly continued its campaign to
undermine meaningful efforts at reform.
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Trading at Wall Street Stock Exchange. Courtesy: Google |
Wall Street
The Bill passed today contains some positive measures, but it does
not do nearly enough to rein in the Wall Street bankers. It is wholly
incommensurate with the devastation Wall Street has wreaked across the
land and planet.
Most importantly on the positive side, the Bill creates a powerful
financial consumer watchdog agency. Had the Consumer Financial
Protection Agency existed during the go-go years earlier this decade, it
could have prevented millions of consumers from being ripped off and
protected the banks from themselves. The financial crisis would have
been significantly less severe.
The bill also contains some modestly beneficial provisions
establishing liability for credit ratings firms, regulating derivatives
and imposing leverage limits on the largest institutions. And it
includes an important measure for a comprehensive public auditing of the
Federal Reserve. But there are huge holes in the legislation. Wall
Street successfully maneuvered to keep most of the important big picture
reforms off the table.
The Bill does very little to address industry structure. Wall Street
and the big banks engaged in reckless betting under the belief that they
were too big to fail - that they were protected by a federal backstop.
The biggest banks are now even bigger than they were before the crisis.
The solution to the too-big-to-fail problem is to break up the big
banks, so that the system can absorb their failure. The bill fails to
impose limits on bank size.
Financial institutions
Many news accounts misleadingly highlight that the bill gives
regulators the authority to break up big financial institutions. The
bill does confer that authority - but only upon a finding of a ‘grave
threat to the financial stability or economy of the United States.’ It
is extraordinarily unlikely that regulators will ever reach such a
finding.
A related problem is the intermixing of commercial and investment
banking in single firms and resultant excessive risk taking by federal
insurance-backed commercial banks. The bill fails to separate commercial
and investment banking, as the Glass Steagall law did before repeal in
1999, or otherwise address this problem.
Financial derivatives and other exotic instruments - labeled by
Warren Buffett as weapons of financial mass destruction - fueled the
crisis. The bill contains very modest regulations over financial
derivatives but leaves more than a quarter of the market free from
regulation and contains loopholes to enable another substantial chunk to
escape regulatory control.
Even for derivatives covered by the bill, the new rules are very
limited. The bill does not establish a regulated exchange for
derivatives trades.
It does not ban financial instruments that do little more than enable
high-stakes gambling. And it does not require the purveyors of
derivative instruments to prove that the benefits of their new products
outweigh the costs and risks to the financial system. The bill also
fails to tackle seriously the problem of executive and high-level pay.
Wall Street mocks the Congress - and the American people - by
preparing to pay tens of billions of dollars in bonuses, in the shadow
of a vote on financial regulation and while the financial sector
continues to benefit from trillions of dollars of public supports.
At a minimum, there should be binding rules mandating that bonus pay
be tied to long-term performance. For 2009, there should also be a
windfall tax imposed on Wall Street profits and bonuses.
Financial crisis
It’s no mystery why this legislation is not stronger. Wall Street
spent $5 billion in political investments in the decade before the
financial crisis to obtain deregulation and nonenforcement of existing
rules. Despite Wall Street having crashed the economy, nothing has
changed on Capitol Hill. Wall Street continues to invest heavily in
politics and wield enormous influence. More than 900 former federal
employees, including 70 former members of Congress, are working as
lobbyists for the financial services sector this year. Wall Street has
spent more than $40 million on campaign contributions since November
2008.
But Wall Street was not wholly able to get its way. Leading Wall
Street lobbyists announced at the outset of the legislative process that
they intended to ‘kill’ the Consumer Financial Protection Agency, and
they failed. Now, as the bill heads to the Senate, there is still an
opportunity for a populist upsurge to demand far-reaching controls on
Wall Street. - Third World Network Features |