New Bill Would Keep Public In The Dark About Threats To Financial System

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First Posted: 11- 6-09 01:45 PM   |   Updated: 11- 6-09 05:02 PM

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Members of Congress and the general public may not be told of "potential emerging threats to the stability of the financial system," thanks to a Thursday vote by a House panel shepherding the bill that's supposed to end "too big to fail."

An amendment offered by Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) and unanimously approved by a voice vote in the House Financial Services Committee specifically deletes a provision in the Financial Stability Improvement Act of 2009.

The two draft versions of the bill originally called for the proposed overseer of threats to the entire financial system to prepare an annual report to Congress describing, among other things, "significant financial market developments and potential emerging threats to the stability of the financial system."

But on Thursday, Meeks' amendment deleted that language and instead compels the council to describe:

"Significant financial and regulatory developments, including insurance and accounting regulations and standards, and assesses the impact of those developments on the stability of the financial system."

Thus, "potential emerging threats" was replaced by "financial and regulatory developments."

Groups advocating for financial reform criticized the move.

"Instead of looking out and actually trying to protect the system, the goal appears to be to make sure we have the regulatory structure that is most amenable to corporate interests of anywhere in the world," said Heather Slavkin, senior legal and policy adviser at AFL-CIO. "It's a complete shift in the purpose and goal of the [systemic risk regulator].

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Barbara Roper, director of investor protection at the Consumer Federation of America, said of Meeks' amendment, "that language is a prescription for a race to the bottom in terms of regulation."

During Thursday's debate, Rep. Mel Watt, a senior Democrat on the committee, also expressed concern about another aspect of Meeks' amendment.

The amendment additionally calls for the council to monitor international developments in financial, insurance and accounting regulations, and to specifically identify those that may "place United States financial services firms or United States financial markets at a competitive disadvantage."

"Part of what we're addressing here when we deal with systemic risk is a race to the bottom," said Watt, of North Carolina. "We need to be careful not to leave the impression that competitive disadvantage trumps safety and soundness."

During the debate, Meeks defended his amendment:

We must work with our counterparts around the world to elevate the playing field to a higher global standard, monitor international regulatory developments to ensure that our firms remain globally competitive and to prevent international regulatory shopping, and the inevitable buildup of systemic risk outside our borders, outside of our regulatory reach, and beyond our capacity to act.


As happened domestically with individual regulators in the years leading up of the financial crisis, it is quite possible for the members of the council to become so focused on the domestic trees that they fail to see the forest of the international regulatory landscape and its evolution. This amendment would explicitly require them to monitor this global landscape, its impact on the competitiveness of the American financial sector, as well as any new emerging pockets of systemic risks which could spill over into our economy, triggering another financial crisis.

In June the Obama administration released a white paper outlining its plan to reform the way banks and financial firms are regulated. There were gaps in the system, simply put, which played a role in the collapse last fall.

In that paper, the administration called for the formation of the council. It would identify "emerging systemic risks" and "emerging risks in firms and market activities." It would also "identify gaps in regulation and prepare an annual report to Congress on market developments and potential emerging risks."

The bill that emerged calls for a council to oversee risks to the entire financial system, which includes firms and activities that pose such a risk. The firms that required billions in taxpayer funds to keep them afloat, like Citigroup and AIG, and those that ultimately flopped, like Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns, are the kind of financial companies the bill would target. The activities include some of the things that worsened the crisis last fall, like firms' unfunded liabilities -- which ultimately were paid by taxpayers, like the billions paid out to honor AIG's derivatives contracts.

Now, the bill in Chairman Barney Frank's Financial Services committee does call for this proposed council to look for and address such dangers; however, Meeks' amendment deleted the provision that the information be relayed to Congress, and thus the public.

In an interview, Meeks' legislative director, Milan Dalal, said the bill's original language of "potential emerging threats" was "very dangerous. The purpose is to make the language clearer and more concise."

Dalal added that regulators may "have different definitions of 'threats'" and that Meeks' amendment does not necessarily preclude the council from reporting to Congress and the public threats that exist to the financial system.

"It's not just threats. We're trying to make it so the regulators have more information to look at," he said. "We're looking at developments as well.

"There might be a new development that we might want to take into account, like 'Oh, England is doing something that we think we should take a look at as well, and consider implementing. It may not be a threat that's going on over there, but it's something that we might want to consider as well."

CFA's Roper remains skeptical.

"You do start to get the picture that the legislation responding to a crisis that was brought about by lax regulation will perpetuate that same approach."

Members of Congress and the general public may not be told of "potential emerging threats to the stability of the financial system," thanks to a Thursday vote by a House panel shepherding the bill tha...
Members of Congress and the general public may not be told of "potential emerging threats to the stability of the financial system," thanks to a Thursday vote by a House panel shepherding the bill tha...
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- coliwabl I'm a Fan of coliwabl 3 fans permalink

We should rename ourselves as theThe United Lobby of America. What shame!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 AM on 11/12/2009
- Tierra I'm a Fan of Tierra 4 fans permalink
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I'm sure our Founding Fathers would be proud.....­..NOT.

So THIS is what they spilled their blood and Sacred Honor for?

When a civilization sinks to such depths of ethical clarity and decadence, we are seeing the decline of a once great nation.

Too big to fail? The Soviet Union failed. Badly.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 AM on 11/10/2009
- Dharil I'm a Fan of Dharil 2 fans permalink

I'm looking forward to the quick passage of legislation that also protects individual members of the public from not having potentially damaging information about their financial practices being provided to banks.

I also assume that the American middle class is too big to fail.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 PM on 11/09/2009
- AwakeNow I'm a Fan of AwakeNow 15 fans permalink

Historian Gaetano Salvemini argued in 1936 that fascism makes taxpayers responsible to private enterprise, "the State pays for the blunders of private enterprise­." Profit is private and individual. Loss is public and social. Fascism is highly militaristic and often significantly increased military spending. Capitalism has 7 steps till it leads to economic fascism. We are on step 6. Wikipedia - Fascism, Capitalism. Be aware!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 11/09/2009

No more bailouts. No more too big to fail. more effort needs to be done to make work. Instead, unemployment keeps climbing as well as the deficit. Tax cuts and toehr stupid gimmicks aren't the answer.

hat tip to http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 11/09/2009

Our so called economy is now subject to central planning. The new politburo is the U.S. Treasury, the Fed and Goldman. No good will ever come of this.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 11/08/2009

The politicans know nothing about economics. They refuse to produce economic models that could track the impact of all their programs. Congress refuses to look reality in the face and just keep on spending. Well if this continues our dollar will be worthless and we will go into a hyper inflation. People in the US have been dumbed down to the point that most people do not even know who money is created.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 PM on 11/08/2009

Out of thin air by offshore bankers then turned into OUR debt. There are only a few of them. A lot of US........­.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 PM on 11/08/2009
- tnkeating I'm a Fan of tnkeating 20 fans permalink
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Just don't be foolish enough to invest and save your money and don't under any circumstances borrow money or take out a loan of any kind, its a sure bet to beat the system.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 PM on 11/08/2009
- Citizen54 I'm a Fan of Citizen54 16 fans permalink

Remember "transparency"?

More "change" we can believe in.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 11/08/2009
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yeah, dude. we heard the joke. it's old now.

don't know why you're gloating over our economy sucking.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 11/09/2009

Mr.Meeks the more regulation the better.Esp­ecially when you bail them out with my tax money.Mayb­e the people should be bailed out now since they are hurting now.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 AM on 11/08/2009
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Bye Bye MEEKS!

"I refuse to live in a Country LIKE THIS and I am NOT LEAVING!"

Signed, Every American on Main Street and in Urban Centers (MM!)!

It is Time to DOWNSIZE G0LDMAN, M0RGAN, JPM, BofA, and C!tigroup!

"Too B1G and EV1L TO FAIL" is a thing of the PAST!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 AM on 11/08/2009
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"The activities include some of the things that worsened the crisis last fall, like firms' unfunded liabilities -- which ultimately were paid by taxpayers, like the billions paid out to honor AIG's derivatives contracts. ..."

When the liabilities were accrued, they may well have been adequately funded. I think Goldman Sachs thought they were.

Minor point, AIG owes the money back to the taxpayer and the counter parties do not owe the money back to the taxpayer, so it was AIG that paid the counter parties. It was their money, not the taxpayers'.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 PM on 11/07/2009
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Ah yes, more legislation to obscure and legalize theft, fraud, extortion and whatever else the money masters want. It's much like that "Patriotic" legislation that legalizes continuous wiretapping, data-mining and search and seizures on the American people any ole time our dear government feels like it.
Time for the citizenry to revolt. These sc@mbags are going to take us down for good, IF we let them!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:40 PM on 11/07/2009
- tbone99 I'm a Fan of tbone99 93 fans permalink

This is one of the most disgusting backward steps the Congess has taken, considering the critical financial mess these same coproarations have put us in.At least the Repugs responded to Enron by passing these protections, tho' they didn't do much enforcemen­t.. For the Dems to undo them ,to protect corporate entities is a betrayal to the people at large and a glaring sign of who they are really representing.

Obscene and irresponsible.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 11/07/2009

Hello.
Demos and GOPers represent the same people; that is the offshore banking elite.
Take heart Americans.
Resistance is victory.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 PM on 11/08/2009
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As a handsome 38-year-old stockbroker, I want this to pass so bad I can taste it.

If I'm using money that was supposed to go into an old woman pension fund to buy Cambodian ho okers and drugs -- money that actually was already spent (we spend things twice on Wall Street) -- why should it be anyone's business.

Sunshine is not the best disinfectant, I say. Dark, shady and dank is the way to go.

Has anyone seen my brandy snifter? Or my bailout receipt?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 11/07/2009
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I want to add, for all you people seething with anger, that it took me a lot of money to buy Rep. Meeks off.

Show some consideration.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 PM on 11/07/2009
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