Even as the vote is due this week, the financial lobby still has its scalpels out weakening it further. Yves Smith of the excellent Naked Capitalism blog notes, “When I was in the UK earlier this year, I saw a very senior financial regulator speak. In the Q&A session, someone asked him to comment on US financial reform. His reply was tantamount to “Wake me when it’s over,” and it was clear his expectations were low.
One source of frustration is that the legislative battle over reform, which went through elephantine labor to produce, at best, a mouse, has gotten most of the media attention, while important fights on the regulatory front are largely hidden from view.” She is referring to the way the industry is hard at work softening the impact of expected rules and regulations to be adopted by the regulatory agencies the bill creates.
It was not reassuring to read that former Goldman Sachs CEO Hank Paulson, Bush’s Treasury Secretary and bailout engineer, likes the bill that President Obama who backed his TARP initiative, is now pushing for passage.
This will take time. Crains New York points out that the implementation of the bill will be stalled until “ federal authorities complete an estimated 150 studies required by the reform bill and draft what Barclays Capital estimates could be 20,000 pages of new rules, with 13 new agencies to be created. This is all expected to take at least two years.''
So much for the urgency we keep hearing about on why we need to rush to re-regulate Wall Street lest a new crash occur, one that seems likelier by the day. The “rubble” from the last crash has still not been moved even as corporate profits are up and as Bob Herbert writes in the New York Times, Wall Street “parties on.”
Financial reformers like Mary Bottari of Banksters USA is happy with the provision for a new consumer protection agency, explaining, “The Bureau has independent regulatory and enforcement authority over a wide array of consumer financial products such as credit cards, mortgages, and even payday loans. Unfortunately, auto dealers escaped its jurisdiction and the institution will be housed at the Federal Reserve.”
You have to be worried about that connect ion to the Fed not only because it failed to protect consumers when they needed that protection the most, Fed head Bernanke has been reduced to begging banks to start lending again to small business. The fact that they aren’t suggests that all the noise about easing the credit crunch has been bogus. The banksters continue to do what’s in their interest, the public interest be dammed. In Europe, new rules limit banker bonuses; here, they are free to continue to be obscenely rewarded.
At the same time, international summits have failed miserably to come with an agreement on any plan, just as there is still no plan to rebuild Haiti. As Larry Chin writes,
“Having seen the results that the G20 achieved prior to the Toronto Summit, in the height of the global crisis (from late 2008 to mid 2009), do we need to be alarmed that in Toronto, the basic outcome was that the G20 members 'agreed to disagree' on bank taxes and on exit strategies from their domestic fiscal stimulus packages?”
Now the IMF is pressuring the US not about financial reform but cutting social security. Notes economist Dean Baker:
“The IMF both bears much of the blame for the imbalances in the world economy and then for failing to clearly sound the alarms about the dangers of the bubble. While the IMF has no problem warning about retired workers getting too much in Social Security benefits, it apparently could not find its voice when the issue was the junk securities from Goldman Sachs or Citigroup that helped to fuel the housing bubble.”
It’s hard to believe that after all the speechifying and anguish, proposed “reforms” will not change much. The only hope is on two other fronts: the courts and the streets.