Bull by the Horns: Fighting to Save Main Street From Wall Street and Wall Street From Itself by Sheila Bair
Author:Sheila Bair [Bair, Sheila]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Government & Business, General, Business & Economics, Corporate Governance
ISBN: 9781451672503
Google: vE51E1lVU3MC
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Published: 2012-09-25T00:00:00+00:00
CHAPTER 20
Dodd-Frank Implementation: The Final Stretch (or So I Thought)
The battles over financial reform did not end with the president signing Dodd-Frank. Virtually all of the reforms in the new law relied on agency rule makings for implementation. So as the industry redirected its army of lobbyists to the rule-writing process, I decided to try to outrun them. I knew that the longer regulators waited to finalize the rules, the greater the risk that they would be watered down. There was also another need for expediency: I had barely a year left in my five-year term. I wanted to make sure we finished the rules on resolution authority, deposit insurance, and the all-important Collins Amendment before I left office. I also wanted to complete rules that we had initiated containing important reforms to the securitization process.
Already amnesia was setting in about how bad the crisis had been. The Tea Party—born of outrage over the 2008 bailouts—was redirecting its ire toward government. Instead of providing political support for commonsense measures such as higher capital requirements, resolution authority, and mortgage-lending reform, it was bashing government and regulations for impeding the economic recovery, forgetting that the recession had been caused by the excesses of many large financial institutions. That, of course, was playing into the hands of industry, and it frustrated me no end. As a market-oriented Republican, I was outraged at the way some of the big firms had come running to Washington to be bailed out of problems of their own making. They had been worse than the proverbial welfare queen. Yet the narrative in some (not all) conservative circles was becoming that the crisis had been the government’s fault; folks at those poor big financial firms had been forced to do all those stupid things and be paid all of those big, multimillion-dollar bonuses because the government had wanted poor people to have mortgages. Right.
With less than twelve months left in my tenure, I had a very full plate. I moved quickly on organizational changes to implement the new law. We created an Office of Complex Financial Institutions (CFI). The office would take responsibility for backup supervision and resolution of bank and nonbank institutions with more than $100 billion in assets. I promoted Jim Wigand, who had been a superstar in handling our bank failures, to be in charge of the new office. Jason Cave was installed as his deputy in charge of creating better systems to monitor big banks. During the crisis, we had learned the hard way that we needed to keep a closer eye on them.
We also created a new division focused solely on consumer protection, consolidating our public education programs for deposit insurance and community outreach with our consumer examination functions for institutions with less than $10 billion in assets. To head the division, I hired Mark Pearce, who had overseen bank supervision for the North Carolina banking department and before that had worked at the Center for Responsible Lending. I wanted us to have a
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