Finance
We Need To Learn From Bank Failures And Insist On Adequate Regulation

Published
2 months agoon
By
James White
Customers line up at SVB on Monday,March 13, 2023 in Wellesley, MA. (Photo by Nancy Lane/MediaNews … [+]
There have been many wagging fingers and sharp tongues in Congress over the last two days. And a lot of irony, because you could reasonably say that many of the people firing away at regulations are in large part responsible for the current problems because of deregulation they voted for in 2018.
In the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearings, Montana’s senators yesterday came on strong, according to a report in The Hill. “For over a year, regulators were saying to this bank, ‘straighten up and fly right,’ and they never did a damn thing about it,” the publication quoted Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT.) said. “You did not have to be an accountant to figure out what the hell was going on here.”
As for his colleague, Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT), the Republican asked Fed Vice Chairman for Supervision Michael Barr, “If you find as part of your review that certain individuals were clearly negligent in the performance of their duties, are you willing to recommend they be fired?”
When regulators at the House Financial Services Committee on March 29, 2023 explained raising concerns about Silicon Valley Bank in 2021, Rep. French Hill (R-AR) said, “That doesn’t sound like a very urgent supervisory process,” according to a second Hill story. On hearing someone suggest tougher regulation, Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-MO) said, “How about enforcing the existing ones first?”
Yeah, about that, Luetkemeyer, Hill, Daines, Tester, and many others can also be found on the list that Newsweek compiled earlier in March 2023 of all the lawmakers who voted to weaken regulations on “smaller” banks back in 2018.
Other members of the Senate Committee who voted for deregulation were Mark Warner (D-VA), Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ), Mike Crapo (R-ID), Thom Tillis (R-NC), John Kennedy (R-LA), Kevin Cramer (R-ND).
And on the larger House Committee: Chairman Patrick McHenry (R-NC), Frank Lucas (R-OK), Bill Posey (R-FL), Bill Huizenga (R-MI), Ann Wagner (R-MO), Andy Barr (R-KY), Roger Williams (R-TX), Tom Emmer (R-MN), Barry Loudermilk (R-GA), Alexander Mooney (R-WV), Warren Davidson (R-OH), and Ralph Norman (R-SC) on the GOP side (with a number probably not having been elected in 2018).
Not to forget a few Democrats in the House Committee as well: David Scott (D-GA), Jim Hines (D-CT), Bill Foster (D-IL), and Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), leaving 19 who didn’t vote for it, whether from being opposed or not in office at the time.
As Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) said on March 7, 2018 about the weakening on banking regulations that would eventually become law, “If this bill passes, Washington will scrap those rules for 25 of those enormous banks. Under this bill, a bank that controls up to a quarter of a trillion dollars in assets and has offices around the country and around the globe will follow the same rules and regulations as a tiny little bank in Adams, Massachusetts.”
Those 25 banks that were of significant size included SVB
VB
Every time the country has started with weak banking regulations or rolled them back, there has been trouble. A list from Rodney Ramcharan, a professor of finance and business economics at the University of Southern California, is what you might expect: the Great Depression, the Savings and Loan crisis of the 1980s, the Great Recession, and now the start of something new. Maybe it will halt at a handful of “smaller” banks with hundreds of billions in assets—ah, wait, Credit Suisse had to be bought out by UMB in Switzerland to keep it from going under.
As a new economic study, by Yale and Boston College researchers, on 750 years (no typo) of banking history shows, “the combination of account guarantees and emergency lending, additionally coupled with a private sector involvement” that we are seeing today and did in the Great Recession, have a high tendency to turn into “’systemic’ bank-distress episodes.”
That is technical terminology for the people hung out to dry being the general populace and taxpayers.
There is a reason that stronger regulations get put back into place after each major disaster. Too many executives at banks have the hearts of gamblers and lack the self-control to embrace sobriety and probity.
It is time that elected officials stop pretending that the problems lie with some small set of rascals, whether Congress or an administration wants to point at executives or regulators. It is legislators who decide where to impose regulation. They are the also the ones who trim it back. These are the people ultimately responsible for bad policy that enables worse actions with terrible consequences. Maybe they could try something different for a change.
Source: Fox Business

US-China trade talks end in more chip war salvos

Frankfurt: Police arrest 35-year-olds: brave passers-by prevent rape

The ‘Succession’ Finale Proved the Roys Are Pathetic People

Brie Garcia: Why I'd 'Change' My Reality TV Wedding to Bryan Danielson

Ramsey savaged by team-mate after saying ‘it’s only Conference League’ to fans

Earth Will Receive an ‘Alien’ Transmission From Mars This Week

This Queer Running Society Wants to Make the Sport More Inclusive

American women’s secret war in Afghanistan

Maria Sharapova Shares the Workouts That Help Her Feel Energized as a New Mom

What’s Up With Mouth Taping as a Sleep Hack?

US-China trade talks end in more chip war salvos

Duggars at Work: Joy-Anna Forsyth’s Birth Video May Have Revealed Abbie Duggar’s New Job

7 Reasons You Might Not Want To Contribute To Your State’s 529 Plan

Below Deck Sailing Yacht’s Chase Lemacks on Gary King – ‘He Can Be a Real a**Hole’ and Was ‘Intimidated’

Debt Ceiling Agreement Lifts Student Loan Pause, Cuts Some IRS Funding
Trending
-
News13 hours ago
GOP Senate Candidates Who Want You to Forget About Their Past Trump Criticism
-
Lifestyle5 hours ago
Martin Scorsese Meets Pope Francis, Announces Film About Jesus – Report
-
Finance24 hours ago
Beijing Unveils ‘Web3 White Paper’ to Foster Innovation and Advancing the Industry
-
Travel5 hours ago
China’s Travel & Tourism sector forecast to see swift post-pandemic recovery
-
Tech5 hours ago
Gizmodo Monday Puzzle: Can You Outsmart a Mouse?
-
Lifestyle5 hours ago
Best Memorial Day 2023 Home Deals: Dyson, Vitamix, Sealy, and More
-
News5 hours ago
How to Make Meetings Shorter (for Real)
-
Auto5 hours ago
2024 Kia Sorento Facelift Caught On Camera Hiding New Headlights