It seems not so much.
On Wednesday night, Paul Krugman was on PBS’s NewsHour discussing the President’s new economic regulation proposal, joined by Diane Casey-Landry, a bank lobbyist, as his counterpoint. As expected, the lobbyist thought the regulations went too far and Krugman thought they did not go far enough:
Ideally, I would like to see something even stronger. I would like to see them tackle the issue of compensation schemes.
The bank lobby is apparently opposed to the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which provoked an ironic reaction from Prof. Krugman:
One thing I was concerned about was whether this consumer financial protection agency would be toothless , but the opposition of [a bank lobby group] makes me believe that it’s not such a bad idea after all.
According to Krugman, the President’s plan does not tackle the biggest problems, like systemic risk.
Interestingly, this complaint appears to be supported by the banking sector. Ms. Casey-Landry repeatedly made the point that major features of the financial crisis were not caused by regular banks or savings and loans, but rather by unregulated mortgage companies, or what she called "shadow banks," and by the role of players like AIG, and by what she called "systemically significant institutions" (which I took to mean anybody deemed "too big to fail").
Eric Dash points out in the New York Times that the plan does nothing to address the role of the ratings agencies and the inherent conflict of interest in their business model:
In the overhaul of financial regulation proposed by the Obama administration on Wednesday, rating services – which, during the boom, stamped high ratings on many subprime securities – will avoid the radical changes their detractors have urged.
While the administration is proposing some modest changes, none addresses what many see as the central problem: Services like Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s are paid by the companies whose securities they are evaluating. It is as if Hollywood studios paid movie critics to review their would-be blockbusters.
The NYT economic blog does not seem very impressed with the President’s proposal (actually Tim Geitner and Larry Summers’s proposal), suggesting it is weak and continues to place additional oversight responsibilities on agencies–like the Federal Reserve, which was one of the biggest cheerleaders/enablers of the bubble, and the SEC, which has become emasculated in recent years–which failed to prevent this crisis in the first place. In fact, the idea of expanding the role of the Fed does not seem to be met with much enthusiasm at all.
Like Krugman, and, in a post here on FDL yesterday, Nomi Prins, the Times’ Simon Johnson seems intrigued by the idea of the Consumer Financial Protection Agency, but also thinks that is not nearly enough:
There is, however, one interesting piece – the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Agency (section 3). The president himself seems to recognize that previous consumer protection was scattered and ineffectual. A strong agency could help protect us all both in boom times and during crises.
But protecting consumers is not the same thing as protecting investors and taxpayers. Major financial players will once again be able to float bubbles, creating the illusion of growth and the reality of further expensive bailouts.
Our financial sector has become very powerful politically – and these proposals are a further sad reminder of that fact.
[emphasis added]
In short, the new plan does not seem to be the kind of sweeping change and major overhaul the US undertook in the 1930s. Perhaps this is because the solution is being proposed before the problem and its causes have actually been investigated. Maybe Nancy Pelosi is right and we need a new Pecora Commission. The legislation creating such a body was signed into law on May 20th. Maybe it should be staffed up and get to work investigating the causes of the problems with specificity so that we might have actual factual data upon which to build a solution.
Related posts:
- Melissa Bean’s Ex-Chief of Staff Now Lobbying Against Financial Regulation
- Financial Regulation Reform: Give Us Your Talking Points
- Re: Re-Regulation — Got Change?
- Obama to Congress: Insurance Requirement Okay with Public Health Plan Option and Cost Regulation
- Obama’s Weekly Address: The Consumer Financial Protection Agency





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Gee, who could have anticipated that perpetuating the status quo in banking would not be looked on in a positive fashion?
Are stock and bond buyers who have to buy stuff thats highly rated by the Rating Agencies still listening to the Rating Agencies? Is anyone seriously listening to the Rating Agencies, banks government etc?
If so why? My point is that without reform the Rating Agencies do not have anyone’s trust. They in fact become a cost on the system an unnecessary one.
How about we ban payday loans or is the banks recovery going to be financed by raking the poor with high payday loans, credit cards, and home loans?
Which while great for the banks will tank the economy.
OT: WAPO is getting rid of Froomkin. They have RIght Wing ilk like Will Krauthammer, Parker and Gerson. WAPO has become wingnut welfare
I would love to see a chart of executive salaries comparing profitable companies to unprofitable companies. I know that German and Japanese auto execs are paid FAR less than their American counterparts. I would love to see a systematic examination of that.
I love how the NewsWhore pairs Krugman and the banking lobbyist, as if they possessed two equally valid points of view.
Every company should be forced to pay for an inspection by a rating agency.
If they don’t like the rating they can pay for another rating and both ratings must then be published.
The rating agencies should all get paid the same regardless so the profit motive to lie is removed.
Plus they should be forced to rotate every few years so no cozy relationships with the companies they regulate.
And they should be held liable if they are wrong. Otherwise we don’t need them who needs a worthless rating?
I guess a 7 to 1 ratio of right-wing extremists to liberals was still not stacking the deck enough.
Well, at least now there’s no reason to click on WaPo links.
Interesting this might be a trend if the MSM fires Liberals before they fire Conservatives then they will appeal to the GOP 20%ers the balance between
Liberal and Conservative keeps Moderate voters reading.
Of course the Newspapers expect to lose the majority who supported Obama.
I expect American Newspapers to lose more money this year than the experts expect (and the experts do think the Papers will lose more money this year).
I have noticed that Clearchannel gave Rush a raise even as they unloaded employees.
They do have to drown out Reality, maybe they need 10 guys?
How about what the CEO of GM made compared to what the regular GM worker made when GM was at its biggest? VS what the head of GM and the regular GM worker make now costs adjusted for inflation of course.
In theory this plan would mean the SEC would become larger than the Pentagon, Homeland Security, the DOJ, combined. Jack Reed, meanwhile has introduced yet another bill to regulate Hedge Funds, etc. The are two others out there. If they have to register with the SEC, I expect it would validate the practice of 70/30 debt/equity investment. It’s the added debt bit that’s been crushing companies held by private equity firms.
I am not sure that would have the same effect. Somehow we need to communicate that these outsized pay packages breed hubris and that the companies would be better run by CEO’s who were merely filthy rich as opposed to filthy stinking rich.
Ok so this is why I was so angry that the reform and bailout did not happen at once. So now we have already bailed out the bankers and now we have to claw tooth and nail to have a fair system.
Putting the Fed in charge…OMG! Obama is smoking crack.
Why don’t we just start where we were before de-regulation? I don’t understand why we just don’t go back to the system that worked for so long before the most recent de-regulation. It worked for a very long time. Then add to that.
Why even start with the Fed. What is the idiotic justification for that? Seriously I want Obama on TV telling me why. Explain it in his own words.
What’s going to be Barney Franks’ position on these regs?
What do you want to bet the banks shopped for favorable ratings from the rating agencies everytime they announced a new corporate merger? The banks also created many of the unregulated mortgage companies to move debt off their books.
They were on the hook to pay weren’t they if AIG and other insurance companies failed right?
The banks are all over these other players they are seeking to blame.
Or we could invest in companies who’s CEO’s are only rich as opposed to filthy rich and rake in the higher returns while the Conventional Wisdom fools keep loosing:)
Cynthia Kouril,
a much belated welcome to Firedoglake !
my, my, my a D+, will be interesting to go back over to McClatchy to see how they are reading it today as yesterday they made it sound much more effective and consumer friendly than it appears to be
doin some googling for ya as there was a comparison chart on that around the time of the AIG Bonuses – don’t recall the specifics but do recall the sky high salaries weren’t even in the same hemisphere as performance -
Because Congress has been bought off that and the economics experts Obama has like Geithner and Summers are part of that corrupt system?
I’m hoping that if the economy fails more and there is a good chance it will then Obama will have no choice but to fire those clowns and hire Krugman.
Or Obama could surrender to the GOP on everything because if we have another economic collapse those will be his choices.
I’m betting he goes Left!
Proposing the Fed as the regulator is laughable, and conflict of interest.
The Fed is owned by the banks.
How is it that an organizations (The Fed) owned by the enterprises to be regulated (The
WanksBanks) can own the regulator?Precisely so. And, this is the reason the proposed changes are less sweeping than might have been hoped for. Later, after we have better information and adequate time to reflect on it, more changes will be proposed. Isn’t that a reasonable way to proceed? So, rather than a D+, Obama deserves an I for Incomplete.
Agreed CEO’s get bonuses even when they lose money performance is not the criteria for bonuses I think the criteria is the bigger the bonus the more loyal the Board of Directors is so don’t expect any oversight from them.
For example Conrade Black the Chicago SunTimes CEO had a bunch of political picks as CEO, Neocons as I recall the paper was run on a shoestring, stripped to the bone but there was no Corporate oversight and Conrade got paid very well.
Political people on the board of directors of a company is a bad sign.
Shorter version: Nothing I do would be good enough for you so I will be good enough to do nothing for you.
MOST IMPORTANTLY, the plan does NOT address ‘leverage’ in specific terms and it was the usage of ‘leverage’ that has caused all the problems(besides the obvious fraud).
Typical Obama: Big speech, crummy followthrough, a few good but vague ideas drowning in a sea of dreck. I would give him and his economics team an F.
This will leave the current corrupt, wealth-destroying system in place with a few modest, and mostly superficial, changes.
Actually, although she did run through the talking points she was set to deliver (banking industry already over regulated blah, blah,blah), otherwise she was actually pretty good. She had some sensible suggestions
As for being consumer friendly, it is the Consumer Agency that seems to be the one bright spot in the plan and kept the Obama financial teams from having to repeat in summer school
incomplete? Whoops then it’s off to summer school and no frisbee on the beach this summer.
Sorry, I have teenagers at home taking Regents and AP exams, so that’s all the talk at my house right now
DING Ding ding
Get this man (woman?) a gold star!
So…what’s so hard about re-enacting Glass-Steagal and completely repealing Gramm Blakely?
Honest to Pete, it’s not Rocket Science!
FunnyWheelieDiva
PS:
Hey Gwen Ifill, thanks for NOT mentioning that Paul Krugman has a f*cking Nobel Prize for Economics. Prick-ette…
FWDiva
Thanks Cynthia, excellent post, as per usual.
Has anyone considered segregating accounts insured by the FDIC in institutions that are NOT publicly traded?
Didn’t intend that as a stand-alone solution. I just thought it might make financial services easier to regulate.
Yeah, it ought to be interesting to hear his views. He and Sen. Dodd will have a say.
Cynthia, excellent post! We have understood how economic bubbles and bank runs work for well over 2000 years. Moreover, banking supervision was already fairly well developed in the time of George Bailey, and anti-fraud provisions were built into securities regulation in 1934. Modern prosecutors hate fraud cases because there must be a showing that the intent to defraud existed at the moment the
suckervictim relied on the misrepresentation. In the case of financial fraud, the sleight of hand is often revealed only years down the road (say, the classic developer-bank insider “strip mall” fraud). Imagine trying to put together a case about a fraud involving a bank and a securities bundler that took place in 2002. Ain’t happenin’. Aside from the few high profile cases, nobody is going to jail. Fraud is a crime that takes place at the front end, and all regulation can do is strive for its timely exposure.