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Jefferson23 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-02-10 05:08 PM
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The Tilted Playing Field
August 2, 2010

By James Kwak

It’s been widely noted that financial reform is now entering a new phase as the action moves from Congress to the regulatory agencies that will write the hundreds of rules necessary to implement the reforms. During the congressional fight, the financial sector had a huge advantage in money and lobbyists, but we had one advantage: the fact that there was (from time to time) a lot of media coverage, and Congressmen care at least a little about public opinion.

In the rule-writing phase, the banks still have a huge advantage in money, lobbyists, and lawyers–and are hiring as many ex-regulators as they can to press their case. As our friend Jennifer Taub writes at The Pareto Commons:

What lies ahead, over the next year and beyond, will require far larger armies of lawyers, economists, finance experts and just plain able bodies and minds to monitor and influence the rulemaking process. Rumor has it that one bank alone plans to set up 100 teams of employees, tasked with particular rule makings. And that is just one bank.
Unfortunately, however, the pressure of the public spotlight is largely off, tilting the battlefield in favor of industry.

Our best hope is that the people in the regulatory agencies really do want to do the right thing, which is quite possible for people like Gary Gensler and Sheila Bair, and soon we’ll have John Dugan out of the OCC. This is a big reason why we don’t need neutral arbiters as the heads of these regulatory agencies–we need real advocates who will take the side of ordinary people and the real economy against a financial sector that is still too big and too predatory.


remainder: http://baselinescenario.com/2010/08/02/the-tilted-playing-field/
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